Bead based protein profiling in blood

This thesis is about protein profiling in blood-derived samples using suspension bead ar- rays built with protein affinity reagents, and the evaluation of binding characteristics and potential disease relation of such profiles. A central aim of the presented work was to discover and verify disease a...

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Main Author: Neiman, Maja
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:Swedish
Published: KTH, Proteomik 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-117960
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7501-629-0
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-1179602013-02-08T16:01:07ZBead based protein profiling in bloodsweNeiman, MajaKTH, ProteomikKTH, Science for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLabStockholm2013Affinity proteomicsprotein arraysuspension bead arrayantigenantibodybiomarker discoveryserologyselectivitysensitivityserumplasmaThis thesis is about protein profiling in blood-derived samples using suspension bead ar- rays built with protein affinity reagents, and the evaluation of binding characteristics and potential disease relation of such profiles. A central aim of the presented work was to discover and verify disease associated protein profiles in blood-derived samples such as serum or plasma. This was based on immobiliz- ing antigens or antibodies on color-coded beads for a multiplexed analysis. This concept generally allow for a dual multiplexing because hundreds of samples can be screened for hundreds of proteins in a miniaturized and parallelized fashion. At first, protein antigens were used to study humoral immune responses in cattle suffering from a mycoplasma infec- tion (Paper I). Here, the most immunogenic of the applied antigens were identified based on reactivity profiles from the infected cattle, and were combined into an antigen cocktail to serve as a diagnostic assay in a standard ELISA set-up. Next, antibodies and their em- ployment in assays with directly labeled human samples was initiated. This procedure was applied in a study of kidney disorders where screening of plasma resulted in the discovery of a biomarker candidate, fibulin-1 (Paper II). In parallel to the disease related applica- tions, systematic evaluations of the protein profiles were conducted. Protein profiles from 2,300 antibodies were classified on the bases of binding properties in relation to sample heating and stringent washing (Paper III). With a particular focus on heat dependent de- tectability, a method was developed to visualize those proteins that were captured to the beads in an immunoassay by using Western blotting (Paper IV). In conclusion, this thesis presents examples of the possibilities of comparative plasma profiling enabled by protein bead arrays.  <p>QC 20130208</p>Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-117960urn:isbn:978-91-7501-629-0Trita-BIO-Report, 1654-2312 ; 2013:4application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language Swedish
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Affinity proteomics
protein array
suspension bead array
antigen
antibody
biomarker discovery
serology
selectivity
sensitivity
serum
plasma
spellingShingle Affinity proteomics
protein array
suspension bead array
antigen
antibody
biomarker discovery
serology
selectivity
sensitivity
serum
plasma
Neiman, Maja
Bead based protein profiling in blood
description This thesis is about protein profiling in blood-derived samples using suspension bead ar- rays built with protein affinity reagents, and the evaluation of binding characteristics and potential disease relation of such profiles. A central aim of the presented work was to discover and verify disease associated protein profiles in blood-derived samples such as serum or plasma. This was based on immobiliz- ing antigens or antibodies on color-coded beads for a multiplexed analysis. This concept generally allow for a dual multiplexing because hundreds of samples can be screened for hundreds of proteins in a miniaturized and parallelized fashion. At first, protein antigens were used to study humoral immune responses in cattle suffering from a mycoplasma infec- tion (Paper I). Here, the most immunogenic of the applied antigens were identified based on reactivity profiles from the infected cattle, and were combined into an antigen cocktail to serve as a diagnostic assay in a standard ELISA set-up. Next, antibodies and their em- ployment in assays with directly labeled human samples was initiated. This procedure was applied in a study of kidney disorders where screening of plasma resulted in the discovery of a biomarker candidate, fibulin-1 (Paper II). In parallel to the disease related applica- tions, systematic evaluations of the protein profiles were conducted. Protein profiles from 2,300 antibodies were classified on the bases of binding properties in relation to sample heating and stringent washing (Paper III). With a particular focus on heat dependent de- tectability, a method was developed to visualize those proteins that were captured to the beads in an immunoassay by using Western blotting (Paper IV). In conclusion, this thesis presents examples of the possibilities of comparative plasma profiling enabled by protein bead arrays.  === <p>QC 20130208</p>
author Neiman, Maja
author_facet Neiman, Maja
author_sort Neiman, Maja
title Bead based protein profiling in blood
title_short Bead based protein profiling in blood
title_full Bead based protein profiling in blood
title_fullStr Bead based protein profiling in blood
title_full_unstemmed Bead based protein profiling in blood
title_sort bead based protein profiling in blood
publisher KTH, Proteomik
publishDate 2013
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-117960
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7501-629-0
work_keys_str_mv AT neimanmaja beadbasedproteinprofilinginblood
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