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Dive into the research topics where Michael J. Lodes is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael J. Lodes.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2002

Use of multiepitope polyproteins in serodiagnosis of active tuberculosis.

Raymond L. Houghton; Michael J. Lodes; Davin C. Dillon; Lisa D. Reynolds; Craig H. Day; Patricia D. Mcneill; Ronald C. Hendrickson; Yasir A. W. Skeiky; Diana Pedral Sampaio; Roberto Badaró; Konstantin P. Lyashchenko; Steven G. Reed

ABSTRACT Screening of genomic expression libraries from Mycobacterium tuberculosis with sera from tuberculosis (TB) patients or rabbit antiserum to M. tuberculosis led to the identification of novel antigens capable of detecting specific antibodies to M. tuberculosis. Three antigens, Mtb11 (also known as CFP-10), Mtb8, and Mtb48, were tested together with the previously reported 38-kDa protein, in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect antibodies in TB patients. These four proteins were also produced as a genetically fused polyprotein, which was tested with two additional antigens, DPEP (also known as MPT32) and Mtb81. Sera from individuals with pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-TB coinfections, and purified protein derivative (PPD)-positive and PPD-negative status with no evidence of disease were tested. In samples from HIV-negative individuals, the ELISA detected antibodies in >80% of smear-positive individuals and >60% smear-negative individuals, with a specificity of ∼98%. For this group, smears detected 81.6% but a combination of smear and ELISA had a sensitivity of ∼93%. The antigen combination detected a significant number of HIV-TB coinfections as well as antibodies in patients with extrapulmonary infections. Improved reactivity in the HIV-TB group was observed by including the antigen Mtb81 that was identified by proteomics. The data indicate that the use of multiple antigens, some of which are in a single polyprotein, can be used to facilitate the development of a highly sensitive test for M. tuberculosis antibody detection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

A multi-epitope synthetic peptide and recombinant protein for the detection of antibodies to Trypanosoma cruzi in radioimmunoprecipitation-confirmed and consensus-positive sera.

Raymond L. Houghton; Darin R. Benson; Lisa D. Reynolds; Patricia D. Mcneill; Paul R. Sleath; Michael J. Lodes; Yasir A. W. Skeiky; David A. Leiby; Roberto Badaró; Steven G. Reed

Peptide epitopes of Trypanosoma cruzi have been identified through expression cloning. A tripeptide (2/D/E) containing three epitopes (TcD, TcE, PEP-2) was used in ELISA to detect antibodies to T. cruzi in 239 of 240 consensus-positive sera and 41 of 42 sera confirmed positive by radioimmunoprecipitation assay. The 1 discrepant consensus-positive serum was used to expression-clone a novel gene that contained a repeat sequence. A peptide corresponding to this sequence, TcLo1.2, was specific for T. cruzi. This antigen detected the discrepant consensus-positive serum and enhanced reactivity of low-positive sera in the tripeptide assay. A branched synthetic peptide, 2/D/E/Lo1.2, or a linear recombinant, r2/D/E/Lo1.2, realized all of the diagnostic features of the four epitopes, including the ability to boost reactivity of low-reactive sera. These studies show that peptides and recombinants containing multiple repeat epitopes are powerful tools for developing assays for T. cruzi antibody detection and have direct application in blood screening.


Transfusion | 2002

Relationship between tick bites and the seroprevalence of Babesia microti and Anaplasma phagocytophila (previously Ehrlichia sp.) in blood donors

David A. Leiby; Amy P.S. Chung; Ritchard G. Cable; Jonathan Trouern‐Trend; Jeffrey McCullough; Mary J. Homer; Lisa D. Reynolds; Raymond L. Houghton; Michael J. Lodes; David H. Persing

BACKGROUND : Tick‐borne diseases, particularly babesiosis and ehrlichiosis, represent recently emerging infections. Despite an increased recognition of the threat tick‐borne agents pose to blood safety, our understanding of the prevalence and transmissibility of these agents in blood donors is limited.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Serological expression cloning and immunological evaluation of MTB48, a novel Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen

Michael J. Lodes; Davin C. Dillon; Raodoh Mohamath; Craig H. Day; Darin R. Benson; Lisa D. Reynolds; Patricia D. Mcneill; Diana Pedral Sampaio; Yasir A. W. Skeiky; Roberto Badaró; David H. Persing; Steven G. Reed; Raymond L. Houghton

ABSTRACT Improved diagnostics are needed for the detection ofMycobacterium tuberculosis, especially for patients with smear-negative disease. To address this problem, we have screenedM. tuberculosis (H37Rv and Erdman strains) genomic expression libraries with pooled sera from patients with extrapulmonary disease and with sera from patients with elevated reactivity withM. tuberculosis lysate. Both serum pools were reactive with clones expressing a recombinant protein referred to here as MTB48. The genomic sequence of the resulting clones was identical to that of the M. tuberculosis H37Rv isolate and showed 99% identity to the Mycobacterium bovis and M. bovis BCG isolate sequences. The genomic location of this sequence is 826 bp upstream of a region containing theesat-6 gene that is deleted in the M. bovis BCG isolate. The mtb48 1,380-bp open reading frame encodes a predicted 47.6-kDa polypeptide with no known function. Southern and Western blot analyses indicate that this sequence is present in a single copy and is conserved in the M. tuberculosis and M. bovis isolates tested but not in other mycobacterial species tested, includingMycobacterium leprae and Mycobacterium avium. In addition, the native protein was detected in the cytoplasm, as was a processed form that was also shed into the medium during culture. Serological analysis of recombinant MTB48 and theM. tuberculosis 38-kDa antigen with a panel of patient and control sera indicates that the inclusion of recombinant MTB48 in a prototype serodiagnostic test increases assay sensitivity for M. tuberculosis infection when it is combined with other known immunodominant antigens, such as the 38-kDa antigen.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Serological Expression Cloning of Novel Immunoreactive Antigens of Babesia microti

Michael J. Lodes; Raymond L. Houghton; Elizabeth S. Bruinsma; Raodoh Mohamath; Lisa D. Reynolds; Darin R. Benson; Peter J. Krause; Steven G. Reed; David H. Persing

ABSTRACT Increased recognition of the prevalence of human babesiosis in the United States, together with rising concern about the potential for transmission of this infection by blood transfusion, has provided motivation to develop definitive serologic and molecular tests for the causative agent, Babesia microti. To develop more sensitive and specific assays for B. microti, we screened a genomic expression library with patient serum pools. This screening resulted in the identification of three classes of novel genes and an additional two novel, unrelated genes, which together encode a total of 17 uniqueB. microti antigens. The first class (BMN1-2 family) of genes encodes seven closely related antigens with a degenerate six-amino-acid repeat that shows limited homology toPlasmodium sp. merozoite and sporozoite surface antigens. A second class (BMN1-8 family) of genes encodes six related antigens, and the third class (BMN1-17 family) of genes encodes two related antigens. The two remaining genes code for novel and unrelated sequences. Among the three classes of antigens and remaining novel sequences, five were chosen to code for the most immunodominant antigens (BMN1-2, -9, -15, and -17 and MN-10). Western blot analysis with the resulting recombinant proteins indicated that these antigens were targets of humoral immune responses during B. microti infection in humans.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2000

Multiepitope Synthetic Peptide and Recombinant Protein for the Detection of Antibodies to Trypanosoma cruzi in Patients with Treated or Untreated Chagas' Disease

Raymond L. Houghton; Darin R. Benson; Lisa D. Reynolds; Patricia D. Mcneill; Paul R. Sleath; Michael J. Lodes; Yasir A. W. Skeiky; Roberto Badaró; Antoniana U. Krettli; Steven G. Reed

A tetrapeptide and a recombinant protein, each representing 4 immunodominant epitopes of Trypanosoma cruzi, were tested by use of ELISA for the detection of serum antibodies. Sera from individuals with Chagas disease, including persons untreated and successfully or unsuccessfully treated, were tested. These assays detected antibody in 100% of the parasitemias. The antibody reactivity decreased based on the success of treatment. Higher sensitivity was observed for tetrapeptide/recombinant protein assays than for lysate-based ELISA, and specificity was improved, particularly with Leishmania sera. The results indicate that multiepitope antigens provide a more sensitive and specific alternative to lysate for detection of anti-T. cruzi antibodies, as required for developing blood screening assays.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Serodiagnosis of Human Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis by Using Novel Combinations of Immunoreactive Recombinant Proteins

Michael J. Lodes; Raodoh Mohamath; Lisa D. Reynolds; Patricia D. Mcneill; Christopher P. Kolbert; Elizabeth S. Bruinsma; Darin R. Benson; Eric Hofmeister; Steven G. Reed; Raymond L. Houghton; David H. Persing

ABSTRACT A panel of seven recombinant antigens, derived fromEhrlichia phagocytophila (the agent of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis), was evaluated by class-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) for utility in the diagnosis of the infection. Fourteen genomic fragments, obtained by serologic expression screening, contained open reading frames (ORFs) encoding 16 immunodominant antigens. Eleven of these antigens were members of the major surface protein (MSP) multigene family. Alignment of their predicted protein sequences revealed a pattern of conserved sequences, which contained short direct repeats, flanking a variable region. In addition, two genomic clones contained two and three MSP ORFs, respectively, indicating that these genes are clustered in tandem copies. The implications for this pattern of both genomic and protein arrangements in antigenic variations of MSPs and in their utilities in a diagnostic assay are discussed. In addition to two MSP recombinant antigens (rHGE-1 and -3) and a fusion protein of these antigens (rErf-1), five further recombinants were evaluated by ELISA. Two of these antigens (rHGE-14 and -15) were novel, while a third (rHGE-2), with no known function, has been described. The final two recombinant antigens (rHGE-9 and -17) represent overlapping segments of the ankyrin gene (ank). The addition of rHGE-9 ELISA data resulted in the detection of 78% (21 of 27) of acute-phase sera. When serologic data for all recombinants are combined, 96.2% (26 of 27) of convalescent-phase patient serum samples and 85.2% (23 of 27) of acute-phase patient serum samples are detected, indicating the potential of these antigens for use in the development of a rapid serologic assay for the detection of E. phagocytophila infection.


Transfusion | 2002

Identification of Babesia microti-specific immunodominant epitopes and development of a peptide EIA for detection of antibodies in serum.

Raymond L. Houghton; Mary J. Homer; Lisa D. Reynolds; Paul R. Sleath; Michael J. Lodes; Victor P. Berardi; David A. Leiby; David H. Persing

BACKGROUND: Babesia microti is a tick‐borne agent that is increasingly implicated in transfusion‐acquired infection, especially in immunocompromised and elderly recipients. To develop a test that can detect antibody responses to B. microti, peptide epitopes identified in two serocomplementary B. microti‐specific antigens were used in a prototype EIA.


Archive | 2000

COMPOUNDS FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY AND DIAGNOSIS OF COLON CANCER AND METHODS FOR THEIR USE

Jiangchun Xu; Michael J. Lodes; Heather Secrist; Darin R. Benson; Madeleine Joy Meagher; John A. Stolk; Tongtong Wang; Yuqiu Jiang; Carole L. Smith; Gordon E. King; Aijun Wang; Jonathan David Clapper; Yasir A. W. Skeiky; Gary R. Fanger; Thomas S. Vedvick; Darrick Carter


Infection and Immunity | 1999

Cloning, expression, and immunological evaluation of two putative secreted serine protease antigens of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Yasir A. W. Skeiky; Michael J. Lodes; Jeffrey A. Guderian; Raodoh Mohamath; Teresa Bement; Mark R. Alderson; Steven G. Reed

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Raodoh Mohamath

Infectious Disease Research Institute

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Thomas S. Vedvick

Infectious Disease Research Institute

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David H. Persing

Infectious Disease Research Institute

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