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Featured researches published by Gary Hermanson.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2011

Systems Biology Approach Predicts Antibody Signature Associated with Brucella melitensis Infection in Humans

Li Liang; Xiaolin Tan; Silvia Juarez; Homarh Villaverde; Jozelyn Pablo; Rie Nakajima-Sasaki; Eduardo Gotuzzo; Mayuko Saito; Gary Hermanson; Douglas M. Molina; Scott Felgner; W.John W Morrow; Xiaowu Liang; Robert H. Gilman; D. Huw Davies; Renée M. Tsolis; Joseph M. Vinetz; Philip L. Felgner

A complete understanding of the factors that determine selection of antigens recognized by the humoral immune response following infectious agent challenge is lacking. Here we illustrate a systems biology approach to identify the antibody signature associated with Brucella melitensis (Bm) infection in humans and predict proteomic features of serodiagnostic antigens. By taking advantage of a full proteome microarray expressing previously cloned 1406 and newly cloned 1640 Bm genes, we were able to identify 122 immunodominant antigens and 33 serodiagnostic antigens. The reactive antigens were then classified according to annotated functional features (COGs), computationally predicted features (e.g., subcellular localization, physical properties), and protein expression estimated by mass spectrometry (MS). Enrichment analyses indicated that membrane association and secretion were significant enriching features of the reactive antigens, as were proteins predicted to have a signal peptide, a single transmembrane domain, and outer membrane or periplasmic location. These features accounted for 67% of the serodiagnostic antigens. An overlay of the seroreactive antigen set with proteomic data sets generated by MS identified an additional 24%, suggesting that protein expression in bacteria is an additional determinant in the induction of Brucella-specific antibodies. This analysis indicates that one-third of the proteome contains enriching features that account for 91% of the antigens recognized, and after B. melitensis infection the immune system develops significant antibody titers against 10% of the proteins with these enriching features. This systems biology approach provides an empirical basis for understanding the breadth and specificity of the immune response to B. melitensis and a new framework for comparing the humoral responses against other microorganisms.


Human Immunology | 1997

The HLA-A0207 Peptide Binding Repertoire is Limited to a Subset of the A0201 Repertoire

John Sidney; Marie-France del Guercio; Scott Southwood; Gary Hermanson; Ajesh Maewal; Ettore Appella; Alessandro Sette

Abstract ABSTRACT: Quantitative A∗0207 peptide binding assays have been developed utilizing HLA transfected cells and affinity purified molecules. By using a panel of single substitution analog peptides, it was demonstrated that A∗0207 binds peptides with main anchor specificity at position 2 and the C-terminus similar to A∗0201. Previous data indicating that A∗0207 (but not A∗0201) also requires the presence of D or P in position 3 of its peptide ligands was confirmed by the analysis of additional single substituted analogs. Finally, by analyzing the A∗0201 and A∗0207 binding capacities of panels of unrelated synthetic peptides, it was found that 8/15 (53.3%) A∗0201 binders with D or P in position 3 bound A∗0207, while only 5/72 (6.9%) A∗0201 binders without D or P in position 3 also bound A∗0207. Together, these data indicate that although A∗0207 may be included amongst A2 supertype alleles, its peptide binding repertoire is largely limited to a subset of that bound by A∗0201.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Discovery of Potential Diagnostic and Vaccine Antigens in Herpes Simplex Virus 1 and 2 by Proteome-Wide Antibody Profiling

Mina Kalantari-Dehaghi; Sookhee Chun; Aziz Alami Chentoufi; Jozelyn Pablo; Li Liang; Gargi Dasgupta; Douglas M. Molina; Algis Jasinskas; Rie Nakajima-Sasaki; Jiin Felgner; Gary Hermanson; Lbachir BenMohamed; Philip L. Felgner; D. Huw Davies

ABSTRACT Routine serodiagnosis of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections is currently performed using recombinant glycoprotein G (gG) antigens from herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) and HSV-2. This is a single-antigen test and has only one diagnostic application. Relatively little is known about HSV antigenicity at the proteome-wide level, and the full potential of mining the antibody repertoire to identify antigens with other useful diagnostic properties and candidate vaccine antigens is yet to be realized. To this end we produced HSV-1 and -2 proteome microarrays in Escherichia coli and probed them against a panel of sera from patients serotyped using commercial gG-1 and gG-2 (gGs for HSV-1 and -2, respectively) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. We identified many reactive antigens in both HSV-1 and -2, some of which were type specific (i.e., recognized by HSV-1- or HSV-2-positive donors only) and others of which were nonspecific or cross-reactive (i.e., recognized by both HSV-1- and HSV-2-positive donors). Both membrane and nonmembrane virion proteins were antigenic, although type-specific antigens were enriched for membrane proteins, despite being expressed in E. coli.


Vaccine | 2012

Measurement of antibody responses to Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) and Dryvax® using proteome microarrays and development of recombinant protein ELISAs

Gary Hermanson; Sookhee Chun; Jiin Felgner; Xiaolin Tan; Jozelyn Pablo; Rie Nakajima-Sasaki; Douglas M. Molina; Philip L. Felgner; Xiaowu Liang; D. Huw Davies

Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) is an attenuated strain of vaccinia virus that is being considered as a safer alternative to replicating vaccinia vaccine strains such as Dryvax(®) and ACAM2000. Its excellent safety profile and large genome also make it an attractive vector for the delivery of heterologous genes from other pathogens. MVA was attenuated by prolonged passage through chick embryonic fibroblasts in vitro. In human and most mammalian cells, production of infectious progeny is aborted in the late stage of infection. Despite this, MVA provides high-level gene expression and is immunogenic in humans and other animals. A key issue for vaccine developers is the ability to be able to monitor an immune response to MVA in both vaccinia naïve and previously vaccinated individuals. To this end we have used antibody profiling by proteome microarray to compare profiles before and after MVA and Dryvax vaccination to identify candidate serodiagnostic antigens. Six antigens with diagnostic utility, comprising three membrane and three non-membrane proteins from the intracellular mature virion, were purified and evaluated in ELISAs. The membrane protein WR113/D8L provided the best sensitivity and specificity of the six antigens tested for monitoring both MVA and Dryvax vaccination, whereas the A-type inclusion protein homolog, WR148, provided the best discrimination. The ratio of responses to membrane protein WR132/A13L and core protein WR070/I1L also provided good discrimination between primary and secondary responses to Dryvax, whereas membrane protein WR101/H3L and virion assembly protein WR118/D13L together provided the best sensitivity for detecting antibody in previously vaccinated individuals. These data will aid the development novel MVA-based vaccines.


Tuberculosis | 2015

Identification of novel Mycobacterium tuberculosis CD4 T-cell antigens via high throughput proteome screening.

Kaustuv Nayak; Lichen Jing; Ronnie M. Russell; D. Huw Davies; Gary Hermanson; Douglas M. Molina; Xiaowu Liang; David R. Sherman; William W. Kwok; Junbao Yang; John Kenneth; Syed Fazil Ahamed; Anmol Chandele; Kaja Murali-Krishna; David M. Koelle

Elicitation of CD4 IFN-gamma T cell responses to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) is a rational vaccine strategy to prevent clinical tuberculosis. Diagnosis of MTB infection is based on T-cell immune memory to MTB antigens. The MTB proteome contains over four thousand open reading frames (ORFs). We conducted a pilot antigen identification study using 164 MTB proteins and MTB-specific T-cells expanded in vitro from 12 persons with latent MTB infection. Enrichment of MTB-reactive T-cells from PBMC used cell sorting or an alternate system compatible with limited resources. MTB proteins were used as single antigens or combinatorial matrices in proliferation and cytokine secretion readouts. Overall, our study found that 44 MTB proteins were antigenic, including 27 not previously characterized as CD4 T-cell antigens. Antigen truncation, peptide, NTM homology, and HLA class II tetramer studies confirmed malate synthase G (encoded by gene Rv1837) as a CD4 T-cell antigen. This simple, scalable system has potential utility for the identification of candidate MTB vaccine and biomarker antigens.


Transfusion | 2016

A targeted immunomic approach identifies diagnostic antigens in the human pathogen Babesia microti

Emmanuel Cornillot; Amina Dassouli; Niseema Pachikara; Lauren Lawres; Isaline Renard; Celia Francois; Sylvie Randazzo; Virginie Bres; Aprajita Garg; Janna Brancato; Joseph E. Pazzi; Jozelyn Pablo; Chris Hung; Andy Teng; Adam D. Shandling; Vu T. Huynh; Peter J. Krause; Timothy Lepore; Stephane Delbecq; Gary Hermanson; Xiaowu Liang; Scott C. Williams; Douglas M. Molina; Choukri Ben Mamoun

Babesia microti is a protozoan parasite responsible for the majority of reported cases of human babesiosis and a major risk to the blood supply. Laboratory screening of blood donors may help prevent transfusion‐transmitted babesiosis but there is no Food and Drug Administration–approved screening method yet available. Development of a sensitive, specific, and highly automated B. microti antibody assay for diagnosis of acute babesiosis and blood screening could have an important impact on decreasing the health burden of B. microti infection.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

T Cell Antigen Discovery Using Soluble Vaccinia Proteome Reveals Recognition of Antigens with Both Virion and Nonvirion Association

D. Huw Davies; Sookhee Chun; Gary Hermanson; Jo Anne Tucker; Aarti Jain; Rie Nakajima; Jozelyn Pablo; Philip L. Felgner; Xiaowu Liang

Vaccinia virus (VACV) is a useful model system for understanding the immune response to a complex pathogen. Proteome-wide Ab profiling studies reveal the humoral response to be strongly biased toward virion-associated Ags, and several membrane proteins induce Ab-mediated protection against VACV challenge in mice. Some studies have indicated that the CD4 response is also skewed toward proteins with virion association, whereas the CD8 response is more biased toward proteins with early expression. In this study, we have leveraged a VACV strain Western Reserve (VACV-WR) plasmid expression library, produced previously for proteome microarrays for Ab profiling, to make a solubilized full VACV-WR proteome for T cell Ag profiling. Splenocytes from VACV-WR–infected mice were assayed without prior expansion against the soluble proteome in assays for Th1 and Th2 signature cytokines. The response to infection was polarized toward a Th1 response, with the distribution of reactive T cell Ags comprising both early and late VACV proteins. Interestingly, the proportions of different functional subsets were similar to that present in the whole proteome. In contrast, the targets of Abs from the same mice were enriched for membrane and other virion components, as described previously. We conclude that a “nonbiasing” approach to T cell Ag discovery reveals a T cell Ag profile in VACV that is broader and less skewed to virion association than the Ab profile. The T cell Ag mapping method developed in the present study should be applicable to other organisms where expressible “ORFeome” libraries are also available, and it is readily scalable for larger pathogens.


Current protocols in human genetics | 2001

Rescuing YAC‐Insert Ends as E. coli Plasmids

Gary Hermanson; Glen A. Evans

End clones from YACs (terminal fragments of the YAC-insert DNA cloned into a plasmid vector) are essential ingredients for contig building using chromosome walking strategies, for fluorescent in situ hybridization experiments, and for generating repeat-free probes for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis or genetic linkage analysis. The basic protocol describes a method for rescuing the CEN (centromere) ends of YACs constructed in the vector pYAC4. However, because this method relies on XhoI and SalI sites, which are relatively rare in the mammalian genome, it is not always possible to obtain a subclone in this manner. An alternate protocol presents a method utilizing integrative plasmid-rescue vectors to facilitate the isolation of both ends of any YAC clone even in the absence of convenient restriction enzyme sites.


Journal of Immunology | 1995

Binding of a peptide antigen to multiple HLA alleles allows definition of an A2-like supertype.

M F del Guercio; John Sidney; Gary Hermanson; C Perez; Howard M. Grey; Ralph T. Kubo; A Sette


Journal of Immunology | 1999

Utilization of MHC Class I Transgenic Mice for Development of Minigene DNA Vaccines Encoding Multiple HLA-Restricted CTL Epitopes

Glenn Ishioka; John Fikes; Gary Hermanson; Brian D. Livingston; Claire Crimi; Mingsheng Qin; Carla Oseroff; Carol Dahlberg; Jeff Alexander; Robert W. Chesnut; Alessandro Sette

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D. Huw Davies

University of California

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Jozelyn Pablo

University of California

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Xiaowu Liang

University of California

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John Fikes

Johns Hopkins University

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Sookhee Chun

University of California

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