Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome: a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome : a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis. / Cló, Emiliano; Kracun, Stjepan K; Nudelman, Aaron S; Jensen, Knud J; Liljeqvist, Jan-Åke; Olofsson, Sigvard; Bergström, Tomas; Blixt, Klas Ola.

In: Journal of Virology, Vol. 86, No. 11, 06.2012, p. 6268-78.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cló, E, Kracun, SK, Nudelman, AS, Jensen, KJ, Liljeqvist, J-Å, Olofsson, S, Bergström, T & Blixt, KO 2012, 'Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome: a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis', Journal of Virology, vol. 86, no. 11, pp. 6268-78. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00392-12

APA

Cló, E., Kracun, S. K., Nudelman, A. S., Jensen, K. J., Liljeqvist, J-Å., Olofsson, S., Bergström, T., & Blixt, K. O. (2012). Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome: a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis. Journal of Virology, 86(11), 6268-78. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00392-12

Vancouver

Cló E, Kracun SK, Nudelman AS, Jensen KJ, Liljeqvist J-Å, Olofsson S et al. Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome: a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis. Journal of Virology. 2012 Jun;86(11):6268-78. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00392-12

Author

Cló, Emiliano ; Kracun, Stjepan K ; Nudelman, Aaron S ; Jensen, Knud J ; Liljeqvist, Jan-Åke ; Olofsson, Sigvard ; Bergström, Tomas ; Blixt, Klas Ola. / Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome : a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis. In: Journal of Virology. 2012 ; Vol. 86, No. 11. pp. 6268-78.

Bibtex

@article{4c933a77c5c344c29474a36042ea4550,
title = "Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome: a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis",
abstract = "Viral envelope proteins mediate interactions with host cells, leading to internalization and intracellular propagation. Envelope proteins are glycosylated and are known to serve important functions in masking host immunity to viral glycoproteins. However, the viral infectious cycle in cells may also lead to aberrant glycosylation that may elicit immunity. Our knowledge of immunity to aberrant viral glycans and glycoproteins is limited, potentially due to technical limitations in identifying immunogenic glycans and glycopeptide epitopes. This work describes three different complementary methods for high-throughput screening and identification of potential immunodominant O-glycopeptide epitopes on viral envelope glycoproteins: (i) on-chip enzymatic glycosylation of scan peptides, (ii) chemical glycopeptide microarray synthesis, and (iii) a one-bead-one-compound random glycopeptide library. We used herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) as a model system and identified a simple O-glycopeptide pan-epitope, (501)PPA(GalNAc)TAPG(507), on the mature gG-2 glycoprotein that was broadly recognized by IgG antibodies in HSV-2-infected individuals but not in HSV-1-infected or noninfected individuals. Serum reactivity to the extended sialyl-T glycoform was tolerated, suggesting that self glycans can participate in immune responses. The methods presented provide new insight into viral immunity and new targets for immunodiagnostic and therapeutic measures.",
author = "Emiliano Cl{\'o} and Kracun, {Stjepan K} and Nudelman, {Aaron S} and Jensen, {Knud J} and Jan-{\AA}ke Liljeqvist and Sigvard Olofsson and Tomas Bergstr{\"o}m and Blixt, {Klas Ola}",
year = "2012",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1128/JVI.00392-12",
language = "English",
volume = "86",
pages = "6268--78",
journal = "Journal of Virology",
issn = "0022-538X",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Characterization of the viral O-glycopeptidome

T2 - a novel tool of relevance for vaccine design and serodiagnosis

AU - Cló, Emiliano

AU - Kracun, Stjepan K

AU - Nudelman, Aaron S

AU - Jensen, Knud J

AU - Liljeqvist, Jan-Åke

AU - Olofsson, Sigvard

AU - Bergström, Tomas

AU - Blixt, Klas Ola

PY - 2012/6

Y1 - 2012/6

N2 - Viral envelope proteins mediate interactions with host cells, leading to internalization and intracellular propagation. Envelope proteins are glycosylated and are known to serve important functions in masking host immunity to viral glycoproteins. However, the viral infectious cycle in cells may also lead to aberrant glycosylation that may elicit immunity. Our knowledge of immunity to aberrant viral glycans and glycoproteins is limited, potentially due to technical limitations in identifying immunogenic glycans and glycopeptide epitopes. This work describes three different complementary methods for high-throughput screening and identification of potential immunodominant O-glycopeptide epitopes on viral envelope glycoproteins: (i) on-chip enzymatic glycosylation of scan peptides, (ii) chemical glycopeptide microarray synthesis, and (iii) a one-bead-one-compound random glycopeptide library. We used herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) as a model system and identified a simple O-glycopeptide pan-epitope, (501)PPA(GalNAc)TAPG(507), on the mature gG-2 glycoprotein that was broadly recognized by IgG antibodies in HSV-2-infected individuals but not in HSV-1-infected or noninfected individuals. Serum reactivity to the extended sialyl-T glycoform was tolerated, suggesting that self glycans can participate in immune responses. The methods presented provide new insight into viral immunity and new targets for immunodiagnostic and therapeutic measures.

AB - Viral envelope proteins mediate interactions with host cells, leading to internalization and intracellular propagation. Envelope proteins are glycosylated and are known to serve important functions in masking host immunity to viral glycoproteins. However, the viral infectious cycle in cells may also lead to aberrant glycosylation that may elicit immunity. Our knowledge of immunity to aberrant viral glycans and glycoproteins is limited, potentially due to technical limitations in identifying immunogenic glycans and glycopeptide epitopes. This work describes three different complementary methods for high-throughput screening and identification of potential immunodominant O-glycopeptide epitopes on viral envelope glycoproteins: (i) on-chip enzymatic glycosylation of scan peptides, (ii) chemical glycopeptide microarray synthesis, and (iii) a one-bead-one-compound random glycopeptide library. We used herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) as a model system and identified a simple O-glycopeptide pan-epitope, (501)PPA(GalNAc)TAPG(507), on the mature gG-2 glycoprotein that was broadly recognized by IgG antibodies in HSV-2-infected individuals but not in HSV-1-infected or noninfected individuals. Serum reactivity to the extended sialyl-T glycoform was tolerated, suggesting that self glycans can participate in immune responses. The methods presented provide new insight into viral immunity and new targets for immunodiagnostic and therapeutic measures.

U2 - 10.1128/JVI.00392-12

DO - 10.1128/JVI.00392-12

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 22491453

VL - 86

SP - 6268

EP - 6278

JO - Journal of Virology

JF - Journal of Virology

SN - 0022-538X

IS - 11

ER -

ID: 38331721