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Dive into the research topics where Maja Neiman is active.

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Featured researches published by Maja Neiman.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010

Toward Next Generation Plasma Profiling via Heat-induced Epitope Retrieval and Array-based Assays

Jochen M. Schwenk; Ulrika Igel; Maja Neiman; Hanno Langen; Charlotte Becker; Anders Bjartell; Fredrik Pontén; Fredrik Wiklund; Henrik Grönberg; Peter Nilsson; Mathias Uhlén

There is a need for high throughput methods for screening patient samples in the quest for potential biomarkers for diagnostics and patient care. Here, we used a combination of undirected target selection, antibody suspension bead arrays, and heat-induced epitope retrieval to allow for protein profiling of human plasma in a novel and systematic manner. Several antibodies were found to reveal altered protein profiles upon epitope retrieval at elevated temperatures with limits of detection improving into lower ng/ml ranges. In a study based on prostate cancer patients, several proteins with differential profiles were discovered and subsequently validated in an independent cohort. For one of the potential biomarkers, the human carnosine dipeptidase 1 protein (CNDP1), the differences were determined to be related to the glycosylation status of the targeted protein. The study shows a path of pursuit for large scale screening of biobank repositories in a flexible and proteome-wide fashion by utilizing heat-induced epitope retrieval and using an antibody suspension bead array format.


Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics | 2011

Systematic antibody and antigen-based proteomic profiling with microarrays

Burcu Ayoglu; Anna Häggmark; Maja Neiman; Ulrika Igel; Mathias Uhlén; Jochen M. Schwenk; Peter Nilsson

Current approaches within affinity-based proteomics are driven both by the accessibility and availability of antigens and capture reagents, and by suitable multiplexed technologies onto which these are implemented. By combining planar microarrays and other multiparallel systems with sets of reagents, possibilities to discover new and unpredicted protein–disease associations, either via directed hypothesis-driven or via undirected hypothesis-generating target selection, can be created. In the following stages, the discoveries made during these screening phases have to be verified for potential clinical relevance based on both technical and biological aspects. The use of affinity tools throughout discovery and verification has the potential to streamline the introduction of new markers, as transition into clinically required assay formats appears straightforward. In this article, we summarize some of the current building blocks within array- and affinity-based proteomic profiling with a focus on body fluids, by giving a perspective on how current and upcoming developments in this bioscience could enable a path of pursuit for biomarker discovery.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2010

A lateral flow protein microarray for rapid determination of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia status in bovine serum

Jesper Gantelius; Carl Hamsten; Maja Neiman; Jochen M. Schwenk; Anja Persson; Helene Andersson-Svahn

Novel analytical methods for a next generation of diagnostic devices combine attributes from sensitive, accurate, fast, simple and multiplexed analysis methods. Here, we describe a possible contribution to these by the application of a lateral flow microarray where a panel of recombinant protein antigens was used to differentiate bovine serum samples in the context of the lung disease contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP). Lateral flow arrays were produced by attaching nitrocellulose onto microscopic slides and spotting of the recombinant proteins onto the membranes. The developed assay included evaluations of substrate matrix and detection reagents to allow for short assay times and convenient read-out options, and to yield a total assay time from sample application to data acquisition of less than ten minutes. It was found that healthy and disease-affected animals could be discriminated (AUC=97%), and we suggest that the use of an antigen panel in combination with the lateral flow device offers an emerging analytical tool towards a simplified but accurate on-site diagnosis.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2011

Plasma Profiling Reveals Human Fibulin-1 as Candidate Marker for Renal Impairment

Maja Neiman; Jesper J. Hedberg; Pierre R. Dönnes; Stephan Hanschke; Ralf Schindler; Mathias Uhlén; Jochen M. Schwenk; Peter Nilsson

There is a need for reliable and sensitive biomarkers for renal impairments to detect early signs of kidney toxicity and to monitor progression of disease. Here, antibody suspension bead arrays were applied to profile plasma samples from patients with four types of kidney disorders: glomerulonephritis, diabetic nephropathy, obstructive uropathy, and analgesic abuse. In total, 200 clinical renal-associated cases and control plasma samples from different cohorts were profiled. Parallel plasma protein profiles were obtained using biotinylated and nonfractionated samples and a selected set of 94 proteins targeted by 129 antigen-purified polyclonal antibodies. Out of the analyzed target proteins, human fibulin-1 was detected at significantly higher levels in the glomerulonephritis patient group compared to the controls and with elevated levels in patient samples for all other renal disorders investigated. Two polyclonal antibodies and one monoclonal antibody directed toward separate, nonoverlapping epitopes showed the same trend in the discovery cohorts. A technical verification using Western blot analysis of selected patient plasma confirmed the trends toward higher abundance of the target protein in disease samples. Furthermore, a verification study was carried out in the context of glomerulonephritis using an independent case and control cohort, and this confirmed the results from the discovery cohort, suggesting that plasma levels of fibulin-1 could serve as a potential indicator to monitor kidney malfunction or kidney damage.


Proteome Science | 2011

Variance decomposition of protein profiles from antibody arrays using a longitudinal twin model

Bernet Kato; George Nicholson; Maja Neiman; Mattias Rantalainen; Christopher Holmes; Amy Barrett; Mathias Uhlén; Peter Nilsson; Tim D. Spector; Jochen M. Schwenk

BackgroundThe advent of affinity-based proteomics technologies for global protein profiling provides the prospect of finding new molecular biomarkers for common, multifactorial disorders. The molecular phenotypes obtained from studies on such platforms are driven by multiple sources, including genetic, environmental, and experimental components. In characterizing the contribution of different sources of variation to the measured phenotypes, the aim is to facilitate the design and interpretation of future biomedical studies employing exploratory and multiplexed technologies. Thus, biometrical genetic modelling of twin or other family data can be used to decompose the variation underlying a phenotype into biological and experimental components.ResultsUsing antibody suspension bead arrays and antibodies from the Human Protein Atlas, we study unfractionated serum from a longitudinal study on 154 twins. In this study, we provide a detailed description of how the variation in a molecular phenotype in terms of protein profile can be decomposed into familial i.e. genetic and common environmental; individual environmental, short-term biological and experimental components. The results show that across 69 antibodies analyzed in the study, the median proportion of the total variation explained by familial sources is 12% (IQR 1-22%), and the median proportion of the total variation attributable to experimental sources is 63% (IQR 53-72%).ConclusionThe variability analysis of antibody arrays highlights the importance to consider variability components and their relative contributions when designing and evaluating studies for biomarker discoveries with exploratory, high-throughput and multiplexed methods.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

Recombinant Surface Proteomics as a Tool to Analyze Humoral Immune Responses in Bovines Infected by Mycoplasma mycoides Subsp. mycoides Small Colony Type

Carl Hamsten; Maja Neiman; Jochen M. Schwenk; Marica Hamsten; John B. March; Anja Persson

A systematic approach to characterize the surface proteome of Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides small colony type (M. mycoides SC), the causative agent of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP) in cattle, is presented. Humoral immune responses in 242 CBPP-affected cattle and controls were monitored against one-third of the surface proteins of M. mycoides SC in a high throughput magnetic bead-based assay. Initially, 64 surface proteins were selected from the genome sequence of M. mycoides SC and expressed as recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli. Binding of antibodies to each individual protein could then be analyzed simultaneously in minute sample volumes with the Luminex suspension array technology. The assay was optimized on Namibian CBPP-positive sera and Swedish negative controls to allow detection and 20-fold mean signal separation between CBPP-positive and -negative sera. Signals were proven to be protein-specific by inhibition experiments, and results agreed with Western blot experiments. The potential of the assay to monitor IgG, IgM, and IgA responses over time was shown in a proof-of-concept study with 116 sera from eight animals in a CBPP vaccine study. In conclusion, a toolbox with recombinant proteins and a flexible suspension array assay that allows multiplex analysis of humoral immune responses to M. mycoides SC has been created.


Proteomics | 2013

Selectivity analysis of single binder assays used in plasma protein profiling

Maja Neiman; Claudia Fredolini; H. Johansson; Janne Lehtiö; Per-Åke Nygren; Mathias Uhlén; Peter Nilsson; Jochen M. Schwenk

The increasing availability of antibodies toward human proteins enables broad explorations of the proteomic landscape in cells, tissues, and body fluids. This includes assays with antibody suspension bead arrays that generate protein profiles of plasma samples by flow cytometer analysis. However, antibody selectivity is context dependent so it is necessary to corroborate on‐target detection over off‐target binding. To address this, we describe a concept to directly verify interactions from antibody‐coupled beads by analysis of their eluates by Western blots and MS. We demonstrate selective antibody binding in complex samples with antibodies toward a set of chosen proteins with different abundance in plasma and serum, and illustrate the need to adjust sample and bead concentrations accordingly. The presented approach will serve as an important tool for resolving differential protein profiles from antibody arrays within plasma biomarker discoveries.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2009

Multiplex Screening of Surface Proteins from Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides Small Colony for an Antigen Cocktail Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay

Maja Neiman; Carl Hamsten; Jochen M. Schwenk; Göran Bölske; Anja Persson

ABSTRACT A recombinant antigen cocktail enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for diagnosis of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP) was developed after careful selection of antigens among one-third of the surface proteome proteins of the infectious agent Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides small colony (M. mycoides SC). First, a miniaturized and parallelized assay system employing antigen suspension bead array technology was used to screen 97 bovine sera for humoral immune responses toward 61 recombinant surface proteins from M. mycoides SC. Statistical analysis of the data resulted in selection of eight proteins that showed strong serologic responses in CBPP-affected sera and minimal reactivity in negative control sera, with P values of <10−6. Only minor cross-reactivity to hyperimmune sera against other mycoplasmas was observed. When applied in an ELISA, the cocktail of eight recombinant antigens allowed a fivefold signal separation between 24 CBPP-affected and 23 CBPP-free sera from different geographical origins. No false-positive results and only two false-negative results were obtained. In conclusion, the selected recombinant mycoplasma antigens qualified as highly specific markers for CBPP and could be employed in both a suspension bead array platform and a cocktail ELISA setting. This set of proteins and technologies therefore offers a powerful combination to drive and further improve serological assays toward reliable, simple, and cost-effective diagnosis of CBPP.


New Biotechnology | 2012

Classification of protein profiles from antibody microarrays using heat and detergent treatment

Anna Häggmark; Maja Neiman; Kimi Drobin; Martin Zwahlen; Mathias Uhlén; Peter Nilsson; Jochen M. Schwenk

Antibody microarrays offer new opportunities for exploring the proteome and to identify biomarker candidates in human serum and plasma. Here, we have investigated the effect of heat and detergents on an antibody-based suspension bead array (SBA) assay using polyclonal antibodies and biotinylated plasma samples. With protein profiles from more than 2300 antibodies generated in 384-plex antibody SBAs, three major classes of heat and detergent susceptibility could be described. The results show that washing of the beads with SDS (rather than Tween) after target binding lowered intensity levels of basically all profiles and that about 50% of the profiles appeared to be lowered to a similar extent by heating of the sample. About 33% of the profiles appeared to be insensitive to heat treatment while another 17% showed a positive influence of heat to yield elevated profiles. The results suggest that the classification of antibodies is driven by the molecular properties of the antibody-antigen interaction and can generally not be predicted based on protein class or Western blot data. The experimental scheme presented here can be used to systematically categorize antibodies and thereby combine antibodies with similar properties into targeted arrays for analysis of plasma and serum.


Journal of Proteomics | 2015

Heat differentiated complement factor profiling

Carl Hamsten; Lillemor Skattum; Lennart Truedsson; Ulrika von Döbeln; Mathias Uhlén; Jochen M. Schwenk; Lennart Hammarström; Peter Nilsson; Maja Neiman

Complement components and their cascade of reactions are important defense mechanisms within both innate and adaptive immunity. Many complement deficient patients still remain undiagnosed because of a lack of high throughput screening tools. Aiming towards neonatal proteome screening for immunodeficiencies, we used a multiplex profiling approach with antibody bead arrays to measure 9 complement proteins in serum and dried blood spots. Several complement components have been described as heat sensitive, thus their heat-dependent detectability was investigated. Using sera from 16 patients with complement deficiencies and 23 controls, we confirmed that the proteins C1q, C2, C3, C6, C9 and factor H were positively affected by heating, thus the identification of deficient patients was improved when preheating samples. Measurements of C7, C8 and factor I were negatively affected by heating and non-heated samples should be used in analysis of these components. In addition, a proof of concept study demonstrated the feasibility of labeling eluates from dried blood spots to perform a subsequent correct classification of C2-deficiencies. Our study demonstrates the potential of using multiplexed single binder assays for screening of complement components that open possibilities to expand such analysis to other forms of deficiencies.

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Jochen M. Schwenk

Royal Institute of Technology

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Mathias Uhlén

Royal Institute of Technology

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Peter Nilsson

Royal Institute of Technology

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Anja Persson

Royal Institute of Technology

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Ulrika Igel

Royal Institute of Technology

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Anna Häggmark

Royal Institute of Technology

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Burcu Ayoglu

Royal Institute of Technology

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