Colin McCoin
Novartis
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Colin McCoin.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Anthony L. Lau; Alice Y. Yam; Melissa D. Michelitsch; Xuemei Wang; Carol Man Gao; Robert J. Goodson; Robert Shimizu; Gulliver Timoteo; John A. Hall; Angelica Medina-Selby; Doris Coit; Colin McCoin; Bruce Phelps; Ping Wu; Celine Hu; David Chien; David Peretz
On our initial discovery that prion protein (PrP)-derived peptides were capable of capturing the pathogenic prion protein (PrPSc), we have been interested in how these peptides interact with PrPSc. After screening peptides from the entire human PrP sequence, we found two peptides (PrP19–30 and PrP100–111) capable of binding full-length PrPSc in plasma, a medium containing a complex mixture of other proteins including a vast excess of the normal prion protein (PrPC). The limit of detection for captured PrPSc was calculated to be 8 amol from a ≈105-fold dilution of 10% (wt/vol) human variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease brain homogenate, with >3,800-fold binding specificity to PrPSc over PrPC. Through extensive analyses, we show that positively charged amino acids play an important, but not exclusive, role in the interaction between the peptides and PrPSc. Neither hydrophobic nor polar interactions appear to correlate with binding activity. The peptide–PrPSc interaction was not sequence-specific, but amino acid composition affected binding. Binding occurs through a conformational domain that is only present in PrPSc, is species-independent, and is not affected by proteinase K digestion. These and other findings suggest a mechanism by which cationic domains of PrPC may play a role in the recruitment of PrPC to PrPSc.
Journal of Virology | 2008
Yinling Lin; Taewoo Kwon; John M. Polo; Yi-Fei Zhu; Stephen Coates; Kevin Crawford; Christine Dong; Mark Wininger; John A. Hall; Mark Selby; Doris Coit; Angelica Medina-Selby; Colin McCoin; Philip Ng; Debbie Drane; David Chien; Jang Han; Michael Vajdy; Michael Houghton
ABSTRACT Broad, multispecific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses to the hepatitis C virus (HCV), as well as virus-cross-neutralizing antibodies, are associated with recovery from acute infection and may also be associated in chronic HCV patients with a favorable response to antiviral treatment. In order to recapitulate all of these responses in an ideal vaccine regimen, we have explored the use of recombinant HCV polypeptides combined with various Th1-type adjuvants and replication-defective alphaviral particles encoding HCV proteins in various prime/boost modalities in BALB/c mice. Defective chimeric alphaviral particles derived from the Sindbis and Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses encoding either the HCV envelope glycoprotein gpE1/gpE2 heterodimer (E1E2) or nonstructural proteins 3, 4, and 5 (NS345) elicited strong CD8+ T-cell responses but low CD4+ T helper responses to these HCV gene products. In contrast, recombinant E1E2 glycoproteins adjuvanted with MF59 containing a CpG oligonucleotide elicited strong CD4+ T helper responses but no CD8+ T-cell responses. A recombinant NS345 polyprotein also stimulated strong CD4+ T helper responses but no CD8+ T-cell responses when adjuvanted with Iscomatrix containing CpG. Optimal elicitation of broad CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses to E1E2 and NS345 was obtained by first priming with Th1-adjuvanted proteins and then boosting with chimeric, defective alphaviruses expressing these HCV genes. In addition, this prime/boost regimen resulted in the induction of anti-E1E2 antibodies capable of cross-neutralizing heterologous HCV isolates in vitro. This vaccine formulation and regimen may therefore be optimal in humans for protection against this highly heterogeneous global pathogen.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2004
Venkatakrishna Shyamala; Phillip Arcangel; Joshua Cottrell; Doris Coit; Angelica Medina-Selby; Colin McCoin; Dennis Madriaga; David Chien; Bruce Phelps
ABSTRACT Recent clinical studies suggest that hepatitis B virus (HBV) load and genotype may be independent predictors of responses to antiviral therapies. However, it is difficult for clinicians to accurately determine viral loads in patient samples because results—both the values and the units of measure—can vary greatly among different tests. Accordingly, the World Health Organization (WHO) has produced the first international standard for HBV DNA for nucleic acid amplification technology (NAT) assays. In the present study, we describe the performance of the target-capture PCR HBV DNA quantitative assay for the quantitation of HBV DNA in clinical samples and reference panels. The range of quantitation was between 50 and 1010 IU/ml. The sensitivity and accuracy of the target-capture PCR assay were demonstrated by using the HBV panel from Quality Control for Medical Diagnostics (QCMD) and the WHO HBV DNA standard. The target-capture PCR assay quantitated the six genotype A members of the QCMD panel and dilutions of the WHO HBV DNA standard within an accuracy of 74 to 142%. Compared to current serological methods, the assay offers window period reductions of 19 days prior to HBV surface antigen and 26 days prior to HBV e antigen detection. The target-capture PCR assay was also compared with four commercially available NAT assays, and the various units of measure were standardized with respect to the international units of the WHO HBV DNA standard. The target-capture PCR assay is a sensitive, accurate, high-throughput, rapid, and reproducible assay for the determination of HBV loads.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005
Sansan Lin; Phillip Arcangel; Angelica Medina-Selby; Doris Coit; Philip Ng; Steve Nguyen; Colin McCoin; Alex Gyenes; Celine Hu; Laura Tandeske; Bruce Phelps; David Chien
ABSTRACT The current commercially licensed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) for hepatitis C virus (HCV) mainly use recombinant proteins containing linear epitopes. There is evidence, however, that conformational epitopes of HCV are more immunoreactive. Thus, we have designed an HCV antibody assay that employs a conformational protein, NS3NS4a PI (with functional protease and helicase activities), and a linear fusion protein, multiple-epitope fusion antigen 7.1 (MEFA 7.1) or MEFA 7.2. We have shown that NS3NS4a PI detects early-seroconversion conformation-sensitive antibodies better than c33c antigen. The correct conformation of NS3NS4a PI also cross-reacts with different genotype samples better than the c33c antigen. MEFA 7.1 and MEFA 7.2 incorporate all the major immunodominant and genotype-specific epitopes of HCV core, E1, E2 hypervariable region 1 (HVR1), E2 HVR1-plus-HVR2 consensus, NS3, NS4, and NS5. Since MEFA 7.1 is degraded by the active NS3NS4a PI protease, we designed a second MEFA 7.2 construct in which the six protease cleavage sites found in MEFA 7.1 were eliminated by amino acid mutation. We demonstrate here that MEFA 7.2 remains intact in the presence of NS3NS4a PI and preserves the epitopes present in MEFA 7.1. Compared to currently licensed assays, an ELISA incorporating a combination of the two antigens NS3NS4a PI and MEFA 7.1 or 7.2 demonstrates better serotype sensitivity and detects seroconversion earlier in many commercially available panels. We believe that an assay using NS3NS4a PI and MEFA 7.1 or 7.2 may have the potential to replace current HCV immunoassays for better sensitivity.
Archive | 2006
Doris Coit; Michael Houghton; Colin McCoin; Angelica Medina-Selby; Michael Vajdy
Archive | 2006
Michael Houghton; Doris Coit; Colin McCoin; Angelica Medina-Selby; Michael Vajdy
Archive | 2009
Doris Coit; Michael Houghton; Colin McCoin; Angelica Medina-Selby; Michael Vajdy
Archive | 2008
Yinling Lin; Taewoo Kwon; John M. Polo; Yi-Fei Zhu; Stephen Coates; Christine Dong; Mark Wininger; John Hall; Mark Selby; Doris Coit; Angelica Medina-Selby; Colin McCoin; Philip Ng; Debbie Drane; David Chien; Michael Vajdy; Michael Houghton; California St
Archive | 2006
Michael Houghton; Doris Coit; Colin McCoin; Angelica Medina-Selby; Michael Vajdy
Archive | 2006
Doris Coit; Michael Houghton; Colin McCoin; Angelica Medina-Selby; Michael Vajdy