PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Epitope Mapping of a Monoclonal Antibody Directed against Neisserial Heparin Binding Antigen Using Next Generation Sequencing of Antigen-Specific Libraries.

  • Maria Domina,
  • Veronica Lanza Cariccio,
  • Salvatore Benfatto,
  • Mario Venza,
  • Isabella Venza,
  • Danilo Donnarumma,
  • Erika Bartolini,
  • Erica Borgogni,
  • Marco Bruttini,
  • Laura Santini,
  • Angelina Midiri,
  • Roberta Galbo,
  • Letizia Romeo,
  • Francesco Patanè,
  • Carmelo Biondo,
  • Nathalie Norais,
  • Vega Masignani,
  • Giuseppe Teti,
  • Franco Felici,
  • Concetta Beninati

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160702
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. e0160702

Abstract

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We explore here the potential of a newly described technology, which is named PROFILER and is based on next generation sequencing of gene-specific lambda phage-displayed libraries, to rapidly and accurately map monoclonal antibody (mAb) epitopes. For this purpose, we used a novel mAb (designated 31E10/E7) directed against Neisserial Heparin-Binding Antigen (NHBA), a component of the anti-group B meningococcus Bexsero® vaccine. An NHBA phage-displayed library was affinity-selected with mAb 31E10/E7, followed by massive sequencing of the inserts present in antibody-selected phage pools. Insert analysis identified an amino acid stretch (D91-A128) in the N-terminal domain, which was shared by all of the mAb-enriched fragments. Moreover, a recombinant fragment encompassing this sequence could recapitulate the immunoreactivity of the entire NHBA molecule against mAb 31E10/E7. These results were confirmed using a panel of overlapping recombinant fragments derived from the NHBA vaccine variant and a set of chemically synthetized peptides covering the 10 most frequent antigenic variants. Furthermore, hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass-spectrometry analysis of the NHBA-mAb 31E10/E7 complex was also compatible with mapping of the epitope to the D91-A128 region. Collectively, these results indicate that the PROFILER technology can reliably identify epitope-containing antigenic fragments and requires considerably less work, time and reagents than other epitope mapping methods.