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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, July 2005, p. 801-807, Vol. 12, No. 7
1071-412X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CDLI.12.7.801-807.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Use of Peptide Library Screening To Detect a Previously Unknown Linear Diagnostic Epitope: Proof of Principle by Use of Lyme Disease Sera
Carl V. Hamby,1*
Marta Llibre,2
Sandeepa Utpat,2 and
Gary P. Wormser2
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,1
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine of New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York2
Received 6 January 2005/
Returned for modification 21 February 2005/
Accepted 25 April 2005

ABSTRACT
Diagnostic peptides previously isolated from phage-displayed
libraries by affinity selection with serum antibodies from patients
with Lyme disease were found to give reproducible serum reactivity
patterns when tested in two different enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay formats. In addition, the hypothetical possibility that
peptides selected by this type of "epitope discovery" technique
might identify the original antigens eliciting antibody responses
was tested by searching for sequence similarities in bacterial
protein databases. In support of this hypothesis, our search
uncovered similarities between peptides representing two different
sequence motifs and sequences in the VlsE and BBA61 antigens
of
Borrelia burgdorferi. Utilizing synthetic peptides, we verified
that the sequence KAA
SKET
PPA
LNK, located at the C terminus of
the VlsE antigen, had the same reactivity pattern to sera from
patients with extracutaneous Lyme disease as the diagnostic
peptide
SKEK
PPS
LNWPA, with which it shared a 7-amino-acid-residue
match (consensus residues are underlined). A peptide with conservative
mutations of five of the consensus residues was nonreactive,
strongly suggesting that the VlsE sequence represents the epitope
that originally elicited antibody responses in these patients.
The diagnostic sensitivity of this new VlsE epitope was relatively
low (30%) compared to that (100%) of the well-documented C
6 diagnostic peptide of VlsE when tested in our small cohort of
10 patients with Lyme disease. Nonetheless, the identification
of this previously unknown epitope serves as a proof of the
principle of the hypothetical ability of "epitope discovery"
techniques to detect specific microbial antigens with diagnostic
relevance in infectious diseases.

INTRODUCTION
Identifying serological markers for the diagnosis of acute infectious
diseases with standard immunological approaches is laborious
and requires, at a minimum, prior knowledge of the etiologic
agents and the ability either to culture them as sources of
antigens or to clone the appropriate antigens and produce recombinant
proteins. The advent of phage-displayed peptide technology,
in which large, complex libraries of filamentous bacteriophage
bearing random peptide sequences on their coat proteins can
be generated and screened with antibodies, has provided a new
approach called "epitope discovery" that can circumvent these
problems. In this approach, phage-displayed peptide libraries
are screened with sera from patients who have suffered a particular
disease or pathological condition to discover peptide epitopes
that are specifically recognized by sera from patients with
the same disease or condition (
1,
3,
4,
6,
8,
9,
14,
16). The
sequence of peptides from phage clones bearing diagnostic epitopes
can be readily determined, and the peptide epitopes can be synthesized
relatively cheaply to provide inexpensive diagnostic tests (
18).
Perhaps of equal importance, "epitope discovery" has the potential to identify the antigen(s) responsible for eliciting antibody responses in patients experiencing a particular infection or condition. In theory, "mimotopes" identified by antibody screening are likely to have some sequence similarity to epitopes on the original antigen that elicited the antibody response. Thus, by performing similarity searches of protein databases, one may be able to identify the original antigenic stimulus to the patient's immune system. This reverse-discovery approach has the potential to identify previously unknown antigens and/or new epitopes on already known antigens. Moreover, epitope discovery has the potential to identify antigens in diseases of unknown etiology that stimulate an antibody response. However, one obvious limitation of applying "epitope discovery" to the identification of antigens with diagnostic relevance is that databases of microbial protein sequences are by no means complete, and hence, similarity searches will miss any antigens that are not represented in the available databases. A second problem arises in that phage libraries displaying peptides with the potential for forming "constrained epitopes" due to sulfhydryl bonds between cystine residues in the peptide sequence may mimic the conformation but not the sequence of an eliciting antigenic epitope. This problem can be minimized by screening libraries displaying linear, unconstrained peptides but carries the risk of missing conformational epitopes that might be valuable as diagnostic reagents.
The value of "epitope discovery" in developing diagnostics for infectious diseases is strongly supported by the report of Kouzmitcheva et al. (10), who identified a set of diagnostic peptides in patients with Lyme disease. They devised a protocol in which 12 different phage-displayed peptide libraries were first absorbed with immunoglobulin G (IgG) from pooled sera of healthy donors to remove epitopes recognized by normal human sera. The depleted libraries were then panned over all possible pairwise combinations of IgG purified from the sera of eight different Lyme disease patients. From the 336 sublibraries that were created by this panning procedure, they identified a set of 12 peptides comprising five different sequence motifs that could specifically identify Lyme disease patients. While the diagnostic sensitivity of any individual peptide was not more than 50%, the combined set of peptides was 100% sensitive and highly specific for the small cohorts (10 patients each) of Lyme disease and control patients that were tested.
We wished to evaluate the diagnostic utility of these peptides and to determine whether similarities existed between the peptide motifs and proteins in sequence databases that might reveal the bacterial antigens responsible for eliciting antibodies in patients with Lyme disease. The 12 peptide libraries employed by Kouzmitcheva et al. (10) included random 8-mer and 15-mer linear peptides and 15-mer peptides containing two cystine residues spaced between 0 and 6 residues apart that could potentially introduce conformational constraints on the epitopes. Although searches conducted in the original report did not reveal any convincing sequence similarities with Borrelia burgdorferi proteins or other bacterial proteins in the TIGR protein database, we found similarities between several of their peptide motifs (designated A, B, C, F, and H) and bacterial antigens in the NCBI database by utilizing the phi-BLAST search algorithm. The most notable similarity was between the motif A sequence and a nine-peptide C-terminal sequence in the VlsE antigen of B. burgdorferi. We present evidence which indicates that this VlsE sequence represents a previously undiscovered epitope recognized by antibodies in Lyme disease patient sera.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Reagents received for evaluation.
George P. Smith of the Division of Biological Sciences, University
of MissouriColumbia, provided human serum samples, purified
phage preparations, and synthetic peptides for evaluation in
this study. The serum samples were obtained from Lyme disease
patients and from patients with rheumatoid and psoriatic arthritis
as previously described (
10). Phages from 12 clones bearing
different peptides and the wild-type f88-4 phage vector were
supplied as cesium chloride-purified preparations. The number,
amino acid sequence, and sequence motif of each peptide, as
designated by Kouzmitcheva and coworkers (
10), are presented
in Table
1. Peptides no. 7 (KPRDTLPPPLNRPPC) and 24 (GNNSVSKEKPPSLNWPAC),
representing motif A sequences, and peptide no. 12 (VPVDAPHAGTKPHSAC),
representing a unique motif B sequence, were synthesized at
the University of Virginia Biomolecular Research Facility, UVA
Health Science Center, Charlottesville, and were also supplied
courtesy of George P. Smith.
Patient serum samples.
Samples of sera from a convenience sample of 10 patients from
New York State with extracutaneous Lyme disease (6 patients
had Lyme arthritis, 2 patients had early neuroborreliosis, and
2 patients [one of whom also had seventh-nerve palsy] had cardiac
manifestations) were studied.
Synthetic peptides.
The C6 peptide (CMKKDDQIAAAMVLRGMAKDGKFALK) of the B. burgdorferi VlsE antigen that is used commercially for Lyme disease serodiagnosis (11, 15); peptide no. 2 (SKEKPPSLNWPAC), representing the motif A consensus sequence; peptide no. 3 (KAASKETPPALNKC), representing the C-terminal sequence of the B. burgdorferi VlsE antigen; and peptide no. 4 (KAASREKGGAVQKC), representing a mutated motif A and VlsE C-terminal consensus sequence, were synthesized and supplied as products that were at least 75% pure by high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (Sigma-Genosys, The Woodlands, TX). C-terminal cystines were incorporated into all sequences to permit covalent linkage via sulfhydryl groups to enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) plates. All the peptides dissolved readily in deionized water and were stored at a 10 mM concentration at 20°C.
Purified-phage ELISA.
Purified phage diluted to a concentration of 4 x 1011 virions/ml in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) (50 mM Tris, 137 mM NaCl, pH 7.4) was added in 50-µl/well volumes to 96-well Maxisorb plates (Nalge Nunc International, Rochester, NY) and allowed to adsorb overnight at 4°C. Plates were washed twice with TTDBA (10 mM Tris, 137 mM NaCl, pH 7.4, containing 0.5% Tween 20 [Sigma, St. Louis, MO] and 0.1% dialyzed bovine serum albumin [Sigma; product no. A7906]). Sera were diluted 1:100 in TTDBA, added to plates in a volume of 50 µl/well, and incubated for a minimum of 2 h at room temperature or at 4°C overnight. Plates were washed 10 times with TBS containing 0.5% Tween 20 (TBS-Tween) and incubated for 1 h at room temperature with either anti-human
-chain-specific (IgG-specific) or anti-human µ-chain-specific (IgM-specific) alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) diluted 1:20,000 in TBS-Tween. Plates were washed 10 times with TBS-Tween and developed with 1 M diethanolamine, pH 9.8, containing 0.5 mg/ml p-nitrophenyl phosphate substrate and 1 mM MgCl2.
Synthetic-peptide ELISA.
Synthetic peptides were covalently linked to Covalink 96-well flat-bottomed plates (Nalge Nunc International) with an EMCS (N-[
-maleimidocaproyloxy]succinimide ester) amine-sulfhydryl-reactive linker (Pierce Biotechnology, Inc., Rockford, IL) containing a 9.4-Å spacer arm. Plates were first reacted via amine groups with 1 mM EMCS dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide containing 1 mM N-ethyldiisopropylamine (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). After a 3-h incubation at room temperature, unreacted EMCS linkers were removed by filling plates twice with dimethyl sulfoxide and discarding the unbound EMCS. Plates were washed once with deionized water, and peptides containing terminal cystine residues diluted to concentrations ranging between 10 and 1,000 µM in 7 M guanidine-HCl (buffered to a pH of 7 with 1 M Na phosphate) were added in volumes of 100 µl/well to plates for binding via SH groups of the cystine residues. Peptides were reacted in EMCS-derivatized plates overnight at room temperature in a humidified chamber. Unbound peptides were removed by washing three times with TBS-Tween, and plates were then refrigerated with TBS-Tween added until ELISAs were performed.
The ELISA for human antibody reactivity was performed by adding 100 µl/well of sera diluted 1:100 in TTDBA to duplicate wells of peptide-linked plates, incubating for a minimum of 90 min, and washing 10 times with TBS-Tween. Antibody binding was quantitated by adding 100 µl/well of 1:20,000 dilutions of alkaline phosphate-conjugated goat anti-human
-chain- and µ-chain-specific antibodies to detect IgG and IgM, respectively. After a 90-min incubation, plates were washed 10 times with TBS-Tween and developed by adding 100 µl/well of p-nitrophenyl phosphate substrate solution. Absorbance readings were taken at an optical density at 405 nm (OD405) at 3-min intervals for 30 min on a Benchmark (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) 96-well microplate reader, and the maximum kinetic velocity (mOD/min) of the reaction in each well was calculated by Microplate Manager 4.0 (Bio-Rad) software. Serum IgG reactivity was expressed as the average mOD/min of duplicate sample wells.
Statistical analysis.
A general linear-model analysis of variance was applied to evaluate the reproducibility of the synthetic-peptide ELISA. Cutoff values for comparing the diagnostic sensitivities of different peptides were established by generating receiver operating curves and selecting the lowest cutoff value that was 100% specific for all peptides.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Phage-displayed peptide and synthetic-peptide ELISAs are reproducible and give equivalent results.
We examined the reproducibility of the ELISA protocol published
by Kouzmitcheva et al. (
10) by utilizing the same cesium chloride-purified
phage clones, patient sera, and control sera that were used
in their report. We obtained the same IgG reactivity patterns
as they reported, although there were not sufficient amounts
of some serum samples to completely replicate their experiments
(Table
2). We also tested sera for IgM reactivity and observed
the same unique IgM reactivity of the serum from Lyme disease
patient 9 for motif A and C peptides and the absence of IgM
reactivity of sera from any other Lyme disease or control patient
for the different peptide motifs as reported by Kouzmitcheva
et al. (
10).
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
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TABLE 2. Reproducibility of serum IgG reactivity patterns determined by ELISAs with purified phage-displayed peptides
|
We next determined whether ELISA results obtained with purified
phage preparations were equivalent to those obtained with synthetic
peptides covalently linked to ELISA plates. Synthetic peptides
no. 7 and 24, representing motif A sequences, and synthetic
peptide no. 12, representing a motif B sequence, were reacted
in 1 mM concentrations in EMCS-derivatized Covalink plates (Nalge
Nunc International) and washed with TBS prior to the performance
of ELISAs. Purified preparations of phage bearing the corresponding
peptides were diluted in TBS and adsorbed to 96-well Maxisorb
plates, as described in Materials and Methods. Patient and control
sera (provided by George P. Smith) were tested at the same dilution
of 1:1,600 as was previously reported for ELISAs detecting IgG
reactivity with purified phage preparations (
10). We found that
the IgG reactivity patterns of serum from a Lyme disease patient
and control sera from healthy humans were the same for synthetic
peptides as for the corresponding phage-displayed peptides (Fig.
1). The reproducibility of the synthetic-peptide ELISA was evaluated
by preparing duplicate plates containing each of the three synthetic
peptides (no. 7, 12, and 24) and performing ELISAs on two different
days with Lyme disease patient no. 6 and control arthritis patient
no. 12 sera at 1:800 and 1:1,600 dilutions. The IgG reactivities
in each assay were normalized by dividing the average kinetic
velocity of each serum sample for each peptide with the highest
kinetic velocity observed in the assay, to yield the fraction
of maximal IgG reactivity to each peptide. These data were analyzed
by a general linear-model analysis of variance to generate
F ratios which relate the variance ascribable to any particular
variable to the random error of the total experiment. In this
experiment, the between-assay variability (
F ratio, 0.04; probability
level, 0.8514) was low, indicating that the assay is reproducible,
and also the variability due to serum dilution (
F ratio, 0.31;
probability level, 0.5854) was low, indicating that twofold
differences in serum dilutions give equivalent results. The
difference between Lyme disease patient no. 6 and control patient
no. 12 serum reactivities for the entire experiment was highly
significant (
F ratio, 13.81; probability level, 0.0017), indicating
that the assay is highly sensitive for detecting differences
in serum reactivities to the peptides being tested.
Sequence motifs have homologies with B. burgdorferi and other bacterial proteins.
To test the hypothesis that "epitope discovery" is useful for
identifying antigens that elicit antibodies over the course
of an infection, we conducted phi-BLAST searches of the nonredundant
NCBI database of bacterial proteins for similarities with peptide
sequences representing five different motifs reported by Kouzmitcheva
et al. (
10). Sequence similarities with proteins from a number
of bacteria that are either normal flora or potential pathogens
of human hosts were found in four out of the five motifs (Table
3). Sequence similarities with proteins from bacteria that do
not infect or colonize human hosts were also found but are not
considered here, since the patients in this study are unlikely
to have had immunologic exposures to such antigens. The most
notable findings from the phi-BLAST search were the strong similarities
of two sequence motifs with
B. burgdorferi proteins. The motif
A sequence had a 7 out of 9 amino acid residue match with the
9 C-terminal residues of the VlsE antigen, for which the high-resolution
crystal structure (
5) can be accessed online through the GenBank
protein database (gi|21730691|pdb|1L8W|A). The motif C sequence
had complete identity with a 5-residue stretch spanning positions
19 to 24 in the N-terminal portion of the BBA61 protein (
7).
Both the A and C motifs also had sequence similarities with
other bacterial proteins. In the case of motif A, similarities
were found with hypothetical proteins encoded by
Escherichia coli and
Clostridium tetani. It seems unlikely that the
E. coli protein is responsible for eliciting an antibody response, since
if it were responsible, one would expect pooled normal sera
and control sera to have these reactivities, and they did not
(Table
1 and Fig.
1). The hypothetical
C. tetani protein CTC0157
can probably be eliminated as the eliciting antigen, since it
is not a constituent of the Tetanus toxoid vaccine and since
these Lyme disease patients are unlikely to have experienced
a
C. tetani infection. In the case of motif C, similarities
were found with hypothetical proteins encoded by
Listeria monocytogenes,
Helicobacter pylori,
Haemophilus influenzae, and
Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron. The close similarity of this motif with protein
sequences from bacteria that frequently colonize or infect humans
could represent a case where antibodies that cross-react with
the BBA61 epitope were elicited. However, these sequence similarities
may be only coincidental, and serologic reactivity may be truly
related to
B. burgdorferi infection, since 3 of 10 serum samples
from Lyme disease patients and 0 of 10 serum samples from control
patients reacted with
B. burgdorferi in the report of Kouzmitcheva
et al. (
10).
Motif B had a high degree of similarity to a sequence in the
type 1 M protein of
Streptococcus pyogenes and to a sequence
in the dihydrolipoamide
S-acetyltransferase of
Brucella melitensis.
The similarity with the type 1 M protein of
S. pyogenes is intriguing
and suggests that perhaps this peptide was selected by sera
from Lyme disease patients who coincidentally had high antistreptococcal
antibody titers due to prior group A streptococcal infections.
If this is indeed the case, this motif will obviously have little
diagnostic utility for Lyme disease. Motif F was similar to
a sequence in a hypothetical protein encoded by
Vibrio cholerae.
We believe that the similarity of motif B with the dihydrolipoamide
S-acetyltransferase of
B. melitensis and the similarity of motif
F with a hypothetical protein of
V. cholerae are likely to represent
chance sequence similarities unrelated to antigenic exposures,
since infections with either of these organisms are extremely
rare in the United States. No similarities were found between
the motif H sequence and any proteins contained in the bacterial
database by using the default parameters of the phi-BLAST search
algorithm. It should be noted that both the motif F and H peptides
were selected from libraries containing two cystine residues
and hence may be conformationally "constrained." Such peptides
may represent conformational epitopes whose linear sequence
may or may not have any similarity with that of the eliciting
antigenic epitope.
Verification of a new VlsE epitope identified by similarity searches.
Of the five motifs we examined, the similarity between the motif A sequence and a 9-residue sequence at the C terminus of the B. burgdorferi VlsE antigen appears to represent the most likely instance where "epitope discovery" identified the antigen responsible for eliciting the antibody response. In fact, prior work with a 51-mer synthetic peptide of the C terminus of the VlsE antigen has shown that this region contains an immunodominant epitope(s) that is apparently associated with the B31 strain of B. burgdorferi (13). The similarity of motif C with the BBA61 protein of B. burgdorferi may also represent another case where "epitope discovery" identified an eliciting antigen. However, due to the possible presence of cross-reacting antibodies to the BBA61 protein, we chose to focus our attention on verifying the immunologic reactivity of the putative VlsE epitope.
To verify that the reactivity of Lyme disease patient sera to the motif A peptide-represented antibodies elicited by the VlsE1 protein epitope, we synthesized peptides of similar lengths (13 to 14 amino acids) derived from the motif A sequence (SKEKPPSLNWPAC) and the actual VlsE sequence (KAASKETPPALNKC) with C-terminal cystines added (consensus sequences are underlined). In addition, to verify that the consensus residues were required for antibody reactivity, a peptide containing conservative amino acid substitutions at five of the consensus sequence residues was synthesized (KAASREKGGAVQKC). These peptides were tested in parallel with our own set of sera from patients with extracutaneous Lyme disease. The ELISA results demonstrated that the motif A sequence and VlsE sequence had the same pattern and level of reactivity to the Lyme disease patient sera and that there was little or no reactivity to the mutated consensus sequence (Fig. 2).
Diagnostic sensitivity of the VlsE C-terminal epitope relative to the immunodominant VlsE C6 epitope.
Once we had determined that the C-terminal peptide sequence,
SKETPPALNK, of the VlsE antigen was likely to represent an epitope
eliciting antibody responses in patients infected with
B. burgdorferi,
we wished to determine its diagnostic sensitivity relative to
the well-characterized immunodominant C
6 diagnostic peptide
contained in the sixth invariant region of the VlsE antigen
(
11,
12,
19). Synthetic peptides comprising the C
6 peptide sequence
(
2), the VlsE C-terminal sequence, and the motif A consensus
sequence were diluted to 10 µM concentrations in 7 M guanidine-HCl
and linked to EMCS-derivatized Covalink plates, as described
in Materials and Methods. The IgG reactivities of patients with
extracutaneous Lyme disease and control patients with rheumatoid
arthritis were detected by ELISA as described above and expressed
as the maximal kinetic velocity of substrate conversion. Receiver
operating curves were constructed from the data in order to
establish a cutoff value for evaluating the diagnostic sensitivity
of each peptide. A cutoff value of 6 mOD/min was chosen to evaluate
the sensitivity of each peptide based on the criteria of selecting
the lowest value for all three peptides that was 100% specific.
At this cutoff value, the C
6 peptide was 100% sensitive for
the serodiagnosis of Lyme disease, the newly defined VlsE epitope
was 30% sensitive, and the motif A peptide was 20% sensitive
(Fig.
3). These results are consistent with reports that identify
the C
6 peptide as an immunodominant epitope (
11) and with the
report of Liang et al. (
13) that identifies the C-terminal region
as containing strain-dependent epitopes with less diagnostic
sensitivity in human populations than the C
6 region. It appears
likely that we have identified a strain-specific epitope that
would obviously be of interest to examine for sequence variation
among different sensu lato strains of
B. burgdorferi (
13).
Summary and conclusions.
The identification of a new linear epitope in the VlsE antigen
of
B. burgdorferi described in this investigation serves as
a proof of the principle of the utility of "epitope discovery"
in detecting antigens responsible for serologic responses to
infectious agents. Our results provide some insight into the
promise and potential pitfalls of this approach, as applied
to discovering diagnostic reagents. To be most effective in
identifying diagnostically relevant antigens, "epitope discovery"
requires a source of disease-specific antibodies, diverse phage-displayed
peptide libraries for epitope selection, an efficient procedure
to deplete phage libraries of irrelevant specificities found
in healthy-human serum, and a complete DNA or protein database
of the etiologic agent in question. We were aided in this investigation
by having access to peptides that were selected under protocols
designed to satisfy the first three conditions and by the availability
of the complete genomic sequence of the infectious entity under
study,
B. burgdorferi. The promise of "epitope discovery" was
demonstrated by finding sequence similarities between two
B. burgdorferi antigens, VlsE and BBA61, and two of the five sequence
motifs we searched. In the case of the VlsE antigen, we verified
that its C-terminal sequence and the motif A sequence had the
same patterns of reactivity with patient sera and that the consensus
sequence was required for antibody binding. Pitfalls of this
technique were also evident in three different respects. (i)
In the case of the motif C match with the BBA61 antigen, there
were matches with several other bacterial proteins that could
potentially elicit cross-reacting antibodies. Hence, it is unclear
which antigen actually elicited the original antibody response.
(ii) Matches were found between B and H motifs and bacterial
proteins that the human subjects whose sera were used for selection
were unlikely to have encountered. This result highlights the
inherent risk of finding matches with irrelevant proteins due
to chance sequence similarities when conducting searches of
protein databases. (iii) Finally, it is somewhat surprising
that other known immunodominant epitopes of
B. burgdorferi,
such as the C
6 peptide on the VlsE antigen and epitopes on antigens
such as DbpA, OspC, and BmpA, were not discovered. The failure
to detect more of such epitopes may be related to several theoretical
limitations of "epitope discovery" utilizing phage-displayed
peptides that have been treated in depth by Smith and Petrenko
(
17) in their excellent review of phage display technology.
The limitations that they discuss basically fall into three
categories: (i) insufficient peptide diversity, (ii) insufficient
peptide structural stability (i.e., "floppiness"), and (iii)
selection of conformational "mimotopes" that have little or
no primary sequence similarity to actual antigenic epitopes.
Taken together, these limitations could account for the limited
number of epitopes that were found in this investigation. However,
our results illustrate the promise of this technique, in that
by identifying specific epitopes, new information can be gained
about the basis for heterogeneity in serologic reactivities
observed for known antigens. Moreover, the identification of
even one epitope can be extremely valuable when attempting to
develop diagnostic reagents and/or identify the causative agent
for diseases of unknown etiology. Taken together, we believe
these results validate "epitope discovery" with phage-displayed
peptide libraries as a valuable approach for specifically identifying
epitopes with diagnostic utility on new or previously known
antigens. Moreover, as sequence information continues to accumulate
in protein databases, this approach will have an increasing
likelihood of success when applied to identifying the etiologies
of various diseases and pathologies whose causes are currently
unknown.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank George P. Smith for his generous donations of synthetic
diagnostic peptides, purified phage clones, and patient sera
for this study. We also thank him for providing detailed technical
advice that was critical for the successful implementation of
synthetic-peptide ELISA protocols.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595. Phone: (914) 594-4195. Fax: (914) 594-4176. E-mail:
hamby{at}nymc.edu.


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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, July 2005, p. 801-807, Vol. 12, No. 7
1071-412X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CDLI.12.7.801-807.2005
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