PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Breaking the code

2013-11-22
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Sonia Fernandez
sonia.fernandez@ia.ucsb.edu
805-893-4765
University of California - Santa Barbara
Breaking the code

You may be sensitive to gluten, but you're not sure. Perhaps you can't put your finger on a recurring malaise, and your doctor is at a loss to figure it out. A diagnostic method recently developed by UC Santa Barbara professor Patrick Daugherty can reveal — on a molecular level — the factors behind conditions thought to have environmental triggers. By decoding an individual's immune system, this elegant and accurate method can demystify, diagnose and provide further insight into conditions like celiac disease, multiple sclerosis, preeclampsia and schizophrenia.

"We have two goals," said Daugherty, a researcher with the Department of Chemical Engineering at UCSB and the campus's Center for BioEngineering. "We want to identify diagnostic tests for diseases where there are no blood diagnostics … and we want to figure out what might have given rise to these diseases."

The process works by mining an individual's immunological memory — a veritable catalog of the pathogens and antigens encountered by his or her immune system.

"Every time you encounter a pathogen, you mount an immune response," said Daugherty. The response comes in the form of antibodies that are specific to the antigens — molecular, microbial, chemical — your body is resisting, and the formation of "memory cells" that are activated by subsequent encounters with the antigen. Responses can vary, from minor reactions — a cough, or a sneeze — to serious autoimmune diseases in which the body turns against its own tissues and its immune system responds by destroying them, such as in the case of Type 1 diabetes and celiac disease.

"The trick is to determine which antibodies are linked to specific diseases," said Daugherty. Celiac disease sufferers, for example, will have certain antibodies in their blood that bind to specific peptides — short chains of amino acids — present in wheat, barley and rye. These peptides are the gluten that is the root of allergies and sensitivities in some people. Like a lock and key, these antibodies — the locks — bind only to certain sequences of amino acids that comprise the peptides — the keys.

"People with celiac disease have two particular antibody types in their blood, which have proved to be enormously useful for diagnosis," said Daugherty.

However, sheer variety and number of antibodies present in a person's blood at any given time has been a challenge for researchers trying to link specific illnesses with specific antibody molecules. One antigen can stimulate the production of many antibodies in response. What's more, each individual's antibodies to even the same antigen differ slightly in their form. The idea of using molecular separation to find the disease antibodies has been around for over 20 years, said Daugherty, but no one had figured quite how to sift through the vast amount of molecules.

To sort through perhaps tens of thousands of antibody molecules present in a person's blood, the research team, including postdoctoral researcher John T. Ballew from UCSB's Biomolecular Science and Engineering graduate program, mixes a sample of a subject's blood — which contains the antibody molecules — with a vast number of different peptides (about 10 billion).

"All the keys associate with their preferred lock," said Daugherty. "The peptides that can bind to an antibody, do so." The researchers then pull out the disease-bound pairs, in a process that progressively decreases the number of antibodies-peptide pairs that are most unique to a particular disease. Repeated with subsequent patients who may have the same symptoms, phenotypes or genetic dispositions, continues to whittle down the size of the peptide pool. Further in vitro evolution of the best draft peptides can identify the particular sequence of amino acid keys that fit into the antibody locks. This sequence can be used to confirm the antibodies in question as the biomarkers specifically associated with the disease.

"The diagnostic performance of the reagents generated with this approach is excellent," said Daugherty. "We can discover biomarkers with as little as a drop of blood, and the peptides discovered can be adapted into preferred low cost testing platforms widely used in clinical practice."

The amino acid sequence of the evolved peptides, when cross-referenced with a database of known proteins, can identify the antigens (that contain the same peptide sequence). This, in turn, can then yield clues into what factors in the patient's environment may have contributed to the disease. The process may be used to gain insight on diseases that are thought to have environmental triggers, including Type-1 diabetes, autism, schizophrenia/bipolar disorder, Crohn's disease, Parkinson's disease, and perhaps even Alzheimers disease. In cases, such as Graves' disease, where an antibody is identified as the cause (as opposed to simply an indicator) knowing the antibody's structure can lead to more effective therapies.

"If you can get rid of the antibody, you can treat the disease," said Daugherty. "By finding these keys, you can block the antibody."

Research on this study was performed also by partners from the Mayo Clinic; the University of Tampere in Finland; UC San Diego; and Seinäjoki Central Hospital in Finland. Their findings are published in a paper titled "Antibody biomarker discovery through in vitro directed evolution of consensus recognition epitopes," in the Nov. 11 online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences.



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UCLA researchers' new technique improves accuracy, ease of cancer diagnosis

2013-11-22
UCLA researchers' new technique improves accuracy, ease of cancer diagnosis 'Deformability cytometry' can closely analyze more than 1,000 cells per second A team of researchers from UCLA and Harvard University have demonstrated a technique that, ...

Fun at work promotes employee retention but may hurt productivity

2013-11-22
Fun at work promotes employee retention but may hurt productivity Within the hospitality industry, manager support for fun is instrumental in reducing employee turnover, particularly for younger employees, according to a team of researchers. However, manager support for fun also ...

Will 2-D tin be the next super material?

2013-11-22
Will 2-D tin be the next super material? Theorists predict new single-layer material could go beyond graphene, conducting electricity with 100 percent efficiency at room temperature A single layer of tin atoms could be the world's first ...

Kessler Foundation study provides first Class 1 evidence for cognitive rehabilitation in MS

2013-11-22
Kessler Foundation study provides first Class 1 evidence for cognitive rehabilitation in MS MEMREHAB Trial shows a significant effect for cognitive rehabilitation in MS that lasts 6 months WEST ORANGE, NJ November 21, 2013. Kessler Foundation researchers ...

NASA sees Tropical Storm Helen affecting southeastern India

2013-11-22
NASA sees Tropical Storm Helen affecting southeastern India NASA's Aqua satellite captured visible and infrared imagery of slow-moving Tropical Storm Helen as it was spreading its western clouds over parts of southeastern India on November 21. On Nov. 21 at 07:55 ...

NASA catches Melissa's fickle life as a tropical storm

2013-11-22
NASA catches Melissa's fickle life as a tropical storm

What can happen when graphene meets a semiconductor

2013-11-22
What can happen when graphene meets a semiconductor UWM study shows another feature that affects electron transport in graphene For all the promise of graphene as a material for next-generation electronics and quantum computing, scientists still don't know ...

Searching for cosmic accelerators via IceCube

2013-11-22
Searching for cosmic accelerators via IceCube Berkeley Lab researchers part of an international hunt In our universe there are particle accelerators 40 million times more powerful than the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. Scientists don't know what ...

Does obesity reshape our sense of taste?

2013-11-22
Does obesity reshape our sense of taste? In a new study, mice who were overweight had fewer taste cells capable of detecting sweetness BUFFALO, N.Y. — Obesity may alter the way we taste at the most fundamental level: by changing how our tongues react to different ...

A hallmark for the development of testicular tumors found in the aberrant regulation of small non-coding RNA

2013-11-22
A hallmark for the development of testicular tumors found in the aberrant regulation of small non-coding RNA Researchers from the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) in Barcelona, Spain, have studied the role of a peculiar class of small non-coding RNAs that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Anthropologist documents how women and shepherds historically reduced wildfire risk in Central Italy

Living at higher altitudes in India linked to increased risk of childhood stunting

Scientists discover a new signaling pathway and design a novel drug for liver fibrosis

High-precision blood glucose level prediction achieved by few-molecule reservoir computing

The importance of communicating to the public during a pandemic, and the personal risk it can lead to

Improving health communication to save lives during epidemics

Antimicrobial-resistant hospital infections remain at least 12% above pre-pandemic levels, major US study finds

German study finds antibiotic use in patients hospitalised with COVID-19 appears to have no beneficial effect on clinical outcomes

Targeting specific protein regions offers a new treatment approach in medulloblastoma

$2.7 million grant to explore hypoxia’s impact on blood stem cells

Cardiovascular societies propel plans forward for a new American Board of Cardiovascular Medicine

Hebrew SeniorLife selected for nationwide collaborative to accelerate system-wide spread of age-friendly care for older adults

New tool helps identify babies at high-risk for RSV

Reno/Sparks selected to be part of Urban Heat Mapping Campaign

Advance in the treatment of acute heart failure identified

AGS honors Dr. Rainier P. Soriano with Dennis W. Jahnigen Memorial Award at #AGS24 for proven excellence in geriatrics education

New offshore wind turbines can take away energy from existing ones

Unprecedented research probes the relationship between sleep and memory in napping babies and young children

Job losses help explain increase in drug deaths among Black Americans

Nationwide, 32 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants for physical activity

Exposure to noise – even while in the egg – impairs bird development and fitness

Vitamin D availability enhances antitumor microbes in mice

Conservation actions have improved the state of biodiversity worldwide

Corporate emission targets are incompatible with global climate goals

Vitamin D alters mouse gut bacteria to give better cancer immunity

Escape the vapes: scientists call for global shift to curb consumer use of disposable technologies

First-of-its-kind study definitively shows that conservation actions are effective at halting and reversing biodiversity loss

A shortcut for drug discovery

Food in sight? The liver is ready!

Climate change could become the main driver of biodiversity decline by mid-century

[Press-News.org] Breaking the code