Eugenie Hainsworth
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Eugenie Hainsworth.
Nature Methods | 2008
Jacob Raphael; Eugenie Hainsworth; Gokhan Demirkan; Manuel Fuentes; Andreas Rolfs; Yanhui Hu; Joshua LaBaer
We developed a high-density self-assembling protein microarray, based on the nucleic acid programmable protein array (NAPPA) concept, to display thousands of proteins that are produced and captured in situ from immobilized cDNA templates. We arrayed up to 1,000 unique human cDNAs and obtained high yields of protein expression and capture with minimal variation and good reproducibility. This method will enable various experimental approaches to study protein function in high throughput.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2011
Karen S. Anderson; Sahar Sibani; Garrick Wallstrom; Ji Qiu; Eliseo A. Mendoza; Jacob Raphael; Eugenie Hainsworth; Wagner R. Montor; Jessica Wong; Jin Gyoon Park; Naa Norkor Lokko; Tanya Logvinenko; Andrew K. Godwin; Jeffrey R. Marks; Paul F. Engstrom; Joshua LaBaer
Cancer patients spontaneously generate autoantibodies (AAb) to tumor-derived proteins. To detect AAb, we have probed novel high-density custom protein microarrays (NAPPA) expressing 4988 candidate tumor antigens with sera from patients with early stage breast cancer (IBC), and bound IgG was measured. We used a three-phase serial screening approach. First, a prescreen was performed to eliminate uninformative antigens. Sera from stage I-III IBC (n = 53) and healthy women (n = 53) were screened for AAb to all 4988 protein antigens. Antigens were selected if the 95th percentile of signal of cases and controls were significantly different (p < 0.05) and if the number of cases with signals above the 95th percentile of controls was significant (p < 0.05). These 761 antigens were screened using an independent set of IBC sera (n = 51) and sera from women with benign breast disease (BBD) (n = 39). From these, 119 antigens had a partial area under the ROC curve (p < 0.05), with sensitivities ranging from 9-40% at >91% specificity. Twenty-eight of these antigens were confirmed using an independent serum cohort (n = 51 cases/38 controls, p < 0.05). Using all 28 AAb, a classifier was identified with a sensitivity of 80.8% and a specificity of 61.6% (AUC = 0.756). These are potential biomarkers for the early detection of breast cancer.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2008
Karen S. Anderson; Jessica Wong; Jacob Raphael; Eugenie Hainsworth; Gokhan Demirkan; Daniel W. Cramer; Diana Aronzon; F. Stephen Hodi; Lyndsay Harris; Tanya Logvinenko; Joshua LaBaer
There is strong preclinical evidence that cancer, including breast cancer, undergoes immune surveillance. This continual monitoring, by both the innate and the adaptive immune systems, recognizes changes in protein expression, mutation, folding, glycosylation, and degradation. Local immune responses to tumor antigens are amplified in draining lymph nodes, and then enter the systemic circulation. The antibody response to tumor antigens, such as p53 protein, are robust, stable, and easily detected in serum; may exist in greater concentrations than their cognate antigens; and are potential highly specific biomarkers for cancer. However, antibodies have limited sensitivities as single analytes, and differences in protein purification and assay characteristics have limited their clinical application. For example, p53 autoantibodies in the sera are highly specific for cancer patients, but are only detected in the sera of 10-20% of patients with breast cancer. Detection of p53 autoantibodies is dependent on tumor burden, p53 mutation, rapidly decreases with effective therapy, but is relatively independent of breast cancer subtype. Although antibodies to hundreds of other tumor antigens have been identified in the sera of breast cancer patients, very little is known about the specificity and clinical impact of the antibody immune repertoire to breast cancer. Recent advances in proteomic technologies have the potential for rapid identification of immune response signatures for breast cancer diagnosis and monitoring. We have adapted programmable protein microarrays for the specific detection of autoantibodies in breast cancer. Here, we present the first demonstration of the application of programmable protein microarray ELISAs for the rapid identification of breast cancer autoantibodies.
FEBS Journal | 2005
Dale N. Larson; Peter Randolph Hazard Stark; Eugenie Hainsworth; Joshua LaBaer
The availability of extensive genomic information and content has spawned an era of high‐throughput screening that is generating large sets of functional genomic data. In particular, the need to understand the biochemical wiring within a cell has introduced novel approaches to map the intricate networks of biological interactions arising from the interactions of proteins. The current technologies for assaying protein interactions – yeast two‐hybrid and immunoprecipitation with mass spectrometric detection – have met with considerable success. However, the parallel use of these approaches has identified only a small fraction of physiologically relevant interactions among proteins, neglecting all nonprotein interactions, such as with metabolites, lipids, DNA and small molecules. This highlights the need for further development of proteome scale technologies that enable the study of protein function. Here we discuss recent advances in high‐throughput technologies for displaying proteins on functional protein microarrays and the real‐time label‐free detection of interactions using probes of the local index of refraction, carbon nanotubes and nanowires, or microelectromechanical systems cantilevers. The combination of these technologies will facilitate the large‐scale study of protein interactions with proteins as well as with other biomolecules.
Infection and Immunity | 2009
Wagner R. Montor; Jin Huang; Yanhui Hu; Eugenie Hainsworth; Susan V. Lynch; Jeannine Weiner Kronish; Claudia L. Ordoñez; Tanya Logvinenko; Stephen Lory; Joshua LaBaer
ABSTRACT Pseudomonas aeruginosa is responsible for potentially life-threatening infections in individuals with compromised defense mechanisms and those with cystic fibrosis. P. aeruginosa infection is notable for the appearance of a humoral response to some known antigens, such as flagellin C, elastase, alkaline protease, and others. Although a number of immunogenic proteins are known, no effective vaccine has been approved yet. Here, we report a comprehensive study of all 262 outer membrane and exported P. aeruginosa PAO1 proteins by a modified protein microarray methodology called the nucleic acid-programmable protein array. From this study, it was possible to identify 12 proteins that trigger an adaptive immune response in cystic fibrosis and acutely infected patients, providing valuable information about which bacterial proteins are actually recognized by the immune system in vivo during the natural course of infection. The differential detections of these proteins in patients and controls proved to be statistically significant (P < 0.01). The study provides a list of potential candidates for the improvement of serological diagnostics and the development of vaccines.
Proteomics Clinical Applications | 2008
Karen S. Anderson; Jacob Raphael; Eugenie Hainsworth; Sahar Sibani; Wagner R. Montor; Marcin Pacek; Jessica Wong; Mariam Eljanne; Martin G. Sanda; Yanhui Hu; Tanya Logvinenko; Joshua LaBaer
The humoral immune response is a highly specific and adaptive sensor for changes in the bodys protein milieu, which responds to novel structures of both foreign and self antigens. Although Igs represent a major component of human serum and are vital to survival, little is known about the response specificity and determinants that govern the human immunome. Historically, antigen‐specific humoral immunity has been investigated using individually produced and purified target proteins, a labor‐intensive process that has limited the number of antigens that have been studied. Here, we present the development of methods for applying self‐assembling protein microarrays and a related method for producing 96‐well formatted macroarrays for monitoring the humoral response at the proteome scale. Using plasmids encoding full‐length cDNAs for over 850 human proteins and 1700 pathogen proteins, we demonstrate that these microarrays are highly sensitive, specific, reproducible, and can simultaneously measure immunity to thousands of proteins without a priori protein purification. Using this approach, we demonstrate the detection of humoral immunity to known and novel self‐antigens, cancer antigens, autoimmune antigens, as well as pathogen‐derived antigens. This represents a powerful and versatile tool for monitoring the immunome in health and disease.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010
Arturo B. Ramirez; Christian M. Loch; Yuzheng Zhang; Yan Liu; Xiaohong Wang; Elizabeth A. Wayner; Jonathon E. Sargent; Sahar Sibani; Eugenie Hainsworth; Eliseo A. Mendoza; Ralph Eugene; Joshua LaBaer; Nicole Urban; Martin W. McIntosh; Paul D. Lampe
The discovery of novel early detection biomarkers of disease could offer one of the best approaches to decrease the morbidity and mortality of ovarian and other cancers. We report on the use of a single-chain variable fragment antibody library for screening ovarian serum to find novel biomarkers for the detection of cancer. We alternately panned the library with ovarian cancer and disease-free control sera to make a sublibrary of antibodies that bind proteins differentially expressed in cancer. This sublibrary was printed on antibody microarrays that were incubated with labeled serum from multiple sets of cancer patients and controls. The antibodies that performed best at discriminating disease status were selected, and their cognate antigens were identified using a functional protein microarray. Overexpression of some of these antigens was observed in cancer serum, tumor proximal fluid, and cancer tissue via dot blot and immunohistochemical staining. Thus, our use of recombinant antibody microarrays for unbiased discovery found targets for ovarian cancer detection in multiple sample sets, supporting their further study for disease diagnosis.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2006
Eugenie Hainsworth; Gokhan Demirkan; Joshua LaBaer
Protein microarrays are a miniaturized format for displaying in close spatial density hundreds or thousands of purified proteins that provide a powerful platform for the high-throughput assay of protein function. The traditional method of producing them requires the high-throughput production and printing of proteins, a laborious method that raises concerns about the stability of the proteins and the shelf life of the arrays. A novel method of producing protein microarrays, called nucleic acid programmable protein array (NAPPA), overcomes these limitations by synthesizing proteins in situ. NAPPA entails spotting plasmid DNA encoding the relevant proteins, which are then simultaneously transcribed and translated by a cell-free system. The expressed proteins are captured and oriented at the site of expression by a capture reagent that targets a fusion protein on either the N- or C-terminus of the protein. Using a mammalian extract, NAPPA expresses and captures 1000-fold more protein per feature than conventional protein-printing arrays. Moreover, this approach minimizes concerns about protein stability and integrity, because proteins are produced just in time for assaying. NAPPA has already proven to be a robust tool for protein functional assays.
Genome Research | 2004
Joshua LaBaer; QingQing Q. Qiu; Anukanth Anumanthan; Wenhong Mar; Dongmei Zuo; Tal Murthy; Helen Taycher; Allison Halleck; Eugenie Hainsworth; Stephen Lory; Leonardo Brizuela
Archive | 2010
Victor Sivozhelezov; Rosanna Spera; Luca Giacomelli; Eugenie Hainsworth; Joshua LaBaer; Nicola Bragazzi; Claudio Nicolini