Claims
- 1. A method of generating a set of capture agents for unambiguously identifying proteins in a sample, comprising:
computationally analyzing amino acid sequences for proteins expected to be present in a variegated sample of proteins, and generating data representative of amino acid sequences unique to each analyzed protein; generating a set of reference reagents, each reference reagent independently including a unique amino acid sequence from one of said analyzed proteins; generating a set of capture agents, each of which selectively binds a unique amino acid sequence of one of said reference reagents, wherein collectively said set of capture agents can bind and unambiguously identifying the occurrence of a plurality of proteins present in said sample under conditions wherein said capture agents are contacted with said proteins, or fragments thereof, that have been rendered soluble in solution.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of computationally analyzing amino acid sequences includes a Nearest-Neighbor Analysis that identifies unique amino acid sequences based on criteria that also include one or more of pI, charge, steric, solubility, hydrophobicity, polarity and solvent exposed area.
- 3. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of computationally analyzing amino acid sequences includes a solubility analysis that identifies unique amino acid sequences that are predicted to have at least a threshold solubility under a designated solution condition.
- 4. The method of claim 1, wherein said unique amino acid sequence is 5-30 amino acids long.
- 5. The method of claim 1, wherein said capture agents are antibodies, or antigen binding fragments thereof.
- 6. The method of claim 1, wherein said capture agents are selected from the group consisting of: nucleotides; nucleic acids; PNA (peptide nucleic acids); proteins; peptides; carbohydrates; artificial polymers; and small organic molecules.
- 7. The method of claim 1, wherein said capture agents are selected from the group consisting of aptamers, scaffolded peptides, and small organic molecules.
- 8. The method of claim 1, wherein said capture agents bind and unambiguously identifying proteins present in a solution of soluble proteins.
- 9. The method of claim 8, wherein said solution of soluble proteins is generated from denaturing and/or proteolysis of a sample proteins from a biological fluid.
- 10. The method of claim 9, wherein said solution of soluble proteins is generated from denaturing and/or proteolysis of a biological sample including cells.
- 11. The method of claim 1, wherein said set of capture agents are optimized for selectivity for said unique amino acid sequence under denaturing conditions.
- 12. The method of claim 1, including the further step of generating an array of said set of capture agents on the surface of beads or an array device in a manner that encodes the identity of a disposed capture agents.
- 13. The method of claim 12, wherein said array includes 100 or more different capture agents.
- 14. The method of claim 12, wherein said array device includes a diffractive grating surface.
- 15. The method of claim 12, wherein said capture agents are antibodies or antigen binding portions thereof, and said array is an arrayed ELISA.
- 16. The method of claim 12, wherein said array device is a surface plasmon resonance array.
- 17. The method of claim 12, wherein said beads are encoded as a virtual array.
- 18. The method of claim 1, including the further step of derivatizing said capture agents with a detectable label.
- 19. The method of claim 1 or 11, including the further step of packaging said capture agents with instructions for:
contacting the capture agents with a sample containing polypeptide analytes produced by denaturation and/or amide backbone cleavage; and detecting interaction of said polypeptide analytes with said capture agents.
- 20. The method of claim 19, wherein the instructions further includes one or more of:
data for calibration procedures and preparation procedures, and statistical data on performance characteristics of the capture agents.
- 21. The method of claim 12, wherein the array has an greater statistical confidence, relative to an ELISA using antibodies generated against native proteins, for quantitating proteins in biological fluid or a solution of soluble proteins generated from denaturing and/or proteolysis of a biological sample including cells.
- 22. The method of claim 12, wherein the array has a regression coefficient (R2) of 0.95 or greater for a reference standard in biological fluid or a solution of soluble proteins generated from denaturing and/or proteolysis of a biological sample including cells.
- 23. The method of claim 12, wherein the array has a recovery rate of at least 50 percent.
- 24. The method of claim 12, wherein the array has an overall positive predictive value for occurrence of proteins in said sample of at least 90 percent.
- 25. The method of claim 12, wherein the array has an overall diagnostic sensitivity (DSN) for occurrence of proteins in said sample of 99 percent or higher.
- 26. The method of claim 12, wherein the array has an overall diagnostic specificity (DSP) for occurrence of proteins in said sample of 99 percent or higher.
- 27. A method for quantitating proteins in a biological sample, comprising
providing a plurality of different capture agents for detecting a plurality of different proteins in a test sample, which capture agents are provided as an addressable array, and each of which capture agents selectively interacts with a unique recognition sequence (URS); contacting the array with a solution of polypeptide analytes produced by denaturation and/or cleavage of proteins from the test sample; determining the identity and amount of proteins in the sample from the interaction of said polypeptide analytes with said capture agents, wherein, for each capture agent, the method as a regression coefficient (R2) of 0.95 or greater.
- 28. The method of claim 27, wherein the array has a recovery rate of at least 50 percent.
- 29. A method for simultaneously detecting the presence of plural specific proteins in a multi-protein sample, the method comprising the steps of:
fragmenting proteins in the sample using a predetermined protocol to generate plural unique recognition sequences, the presence of which in said sample are indicative unambiguously of the presence of target proteins from which they are derived, contacting at least a portion of the sample with plural capture agents which bind specifically to at least a portion of said unique recognition sequences under the conditions which obtain in the sample after the fragmentation, and, detecting binding events as indicative of the presence of target proteins.
- 30. The method of claim 29, wherein the capture agents comprise binders for a set of unique recognition sequences which upon binding with a sample are indicative of the presence of a disease, physiologic state, or species.
- 31. A method for detecting the presence of one or more protein(s) in a sample, the method comprising:
(i) providing a solution of soluble peptide analytes produced by denaturations and/or cleavage of a plurality of sample proteins, and (ii) optionally, labeling said collection of peptides by a detectable moiety; (iii) contacting said solution with one or more capture agent(s), wherein each of said capture agent(s) is able to specifically recognize and interact with a unique recognition sequence (URS) of a reference protein; and, (iv) detecting the binding between one or more of said capture agent(s) and said peptide analytes, wherein the detection of binding between a capture agent and a peptide analyte indicates the presence of said reference protein in said plurality of sample proteins.
- 32. The method of claim 31, wherein said method is used in diagnosis, drug discovery or protein sequencing.
- 33. The method of claim 32, wherein said diagnosis is clinical diagnosis.
- 34. The method of claim 32, wherein said diagnosis is environmental diagnosis.
- 35. The method of claim 31, wherein said capture agents are selected from the group consisting of: nucleotides; nucleic acids; PNA (peptide nucleic acids); proteins; peptides; carbohydrates; artificial polymers; and small organic molecules.
- 36. The method of claim 31, wherein said capture agents are antibodies, or antigen binding fragments thereof.
- 37. The method of claim 36, wherein said capture agent is a full-length antibody, or a functional antibody fragment selected from: an Fab fragment, an F(ab′)2 fragment, an Fd fragment, an Fv fragment, a dAb fragment, an isolated complementarity determining region (CDR), a single chain antibody (scFv), or derivative thereof.
- 38. The method of claim 36, wherein each of said capture agents is a single chain antibody.
- 39. The method of claim 35, wherein said capture agents are aptamers.
- 40. The method of claim 35, wherein said capture agents are scaffolded peptides.
- 41. The method of claim 35, wherein said capture agents are small organic molecules.
- 42. The method of claim 31, wherein said capture agents are immobilized on a solid support.
- 43. The method of claim 42, wherein said capture agents are arranged as an array on said solid support, with each capture agent occupying a distinct addressable location on said array.
- 44. The method of claim 42, wherein said capture agents are associated on the surface of encoded beads to form a virtual array of said capture agents.
- 45. The method of claim 43 or 44, wherein said array comprises at least 1,000 different capture agents bound to said support.
- 46. The method of claim 43 or 44, wherein said array comprises at least 10,000 different capture agents bound to said support.
- 47. The method of claim 43, wherein said capture agents are bound to said support at a density of 100 capture agents /cm2.
- 48. The method of claim 31, wherein said soluble peptide analytes are produced by treatment of said sample proteins with a protease, a chemical agent, physical shearing, or sonication.
- 49. The method of claim 48, wherein said protease is trypsin, chymotrypsin, pepsin, papain, carboxypeptidase, calpain, subtilisin, gluc-C, endo lys-C or proteinase K.
- 50. The method of claim 48, wherein said soluble peptide analytes are produced by treatment of said sample proteins with a chemical agent.
- 51. The method of claim 50, wherein said chemical agent is cyanogen bromide.
- 52. The method of claim 31, wherein said protein sample is from a physiological, an environmental or an artificial source.
- 53. The method of claim 52, wherein said physiological source is body fluid selected from: saliva, mucous, sweat, whole blood, serum, urine, amniotic fluid, genital fluid, fecal material, marrow, plasma, spinal fluid, pericardial fluid, gastric fluid, abdominal fluid, peritoneal fluid, pleural fluid, synovial fluid, cyst fluid, cerebrospinal fluid, lung lavage fluid, lymphatic fluid, tears, prostatitc fluid, extraction from other body parts, or secretion from other glands.
- 54. The method of claim 52, wherein said protein sample is from supernatant, whole cell lysate, or cell fraction obtained by lysis and fractionation of cellular material, extract or fraction of cells obtained directly from a biological entity or cells grown in an artificial environment.
- 55. The method of claim 31, wherein said sample is obtained from human, mouse, rat, frog (Xenopus), fish (zebra fish), fly (Drosophila melanogaster), nematode (C. elegans), fission or budding yeast, or plant (Arabidopsis thaliana).
- 56. The method of claim 31, wherein said URS is a linear sequence.
- 57. The method of claim 31, wherein said URS is a non-contiguous sequence.
- 58. The method of claim 31, wherein said URS is 5-10 amino acids in length.
- 59. The method of claim 31, wherein said URS is 8 amino acids in length.
- 60. The method of claim 31, wherein said URS is selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOs: 1-546 or a sub-collection thereof.
- 61. The method of claim 31, for detection of a pathogen.
- 62. The method of claim 61, for detecting one or more toxins selected from anthrax toxin, small pox toxin, cholera toxin, Staphylococcus aureus a-toxin, Shiga toxin, cytotoxic necrotizing factor type 1, Escherichia coli heat-stable toxin, botulinum toxins, or tetanus neurotoxins.
- 63. The method of claim 31, wherein said soluble peptide analytes are produced by treatment of membrane bound proteins.
- 64. The method of claim 31, further comprising treating said sample proteins or said soluble peptide analytes to reduce post-translational modification of said soluble peptide analytes.
- 65. The method of claim 64, wherein said post-translational modification is phosphorylation, methylation, glycosylation, acetylation, or prenylation.
- 66. The method of claim 31, wherein said soluble peptide analytes are produced under conditions to preserve post-translational modification, and said capture agent(s) specifically interacts and discriminates between unmodified and post-translationally modified forms of said unique recognition sequence (URS) of a reference protein.
- 67. The method of claim 66, wherein said capture agent(s) specifically interact with and discriminate between post-translational modification of the reference protein selected from the group consisting of acetylation, amidation, deamidation, prenylation, formylation, glycosylation, hydroxylation, methylation, myristoylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, ribosylation and sulphation.
- 68. The method of claim 31, wherein step (2) is carried out, and step (4) is effectuated by detecting said detectable moiety on said soluble peptide analytes.
- 69. The method of claim 68, wherein said detectable moiety is a fluorescent label, a stainable dye, a chemilumninescent compound, a colloidal particle, a radioactive isotope, a near-infrared dye, a DNA dendrimer, a water-soluble quantum dot, a latex bead, a selenium particle, or a europium nanoparticle.
- 70. The method of claim 31, wherein step (2) is not carried out, and step (4) is effectuated by ELISA or immunoRCA.
- 71. The method of claim 31, wherein step (2) is not carried out, and step (4) is effectuated by mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF), calorimetric resonant reflection using a SWS or SRVD biosensor, surface plasmon resonance (SPR), interferometry, gravimetry, ellipsometry, an evanascent wave device, resonance light scattering, reflectometry, a fluorescent polymer superquenching-based bioassay, or arrays of nanosensors comprising nanowires or nanotubes.
- 72. The method of claim 31, further comprising quantitating the amount of bound URS to each of said one or more capture agent(s).
- 73. The method of claim 31, wherein said capture agents are selected to detect a pattern of proteins in said protein sample that is indicative of a disease, physiologic state, or species.
- 74. The method of claim 31, wherein said sample proteins are treated with a pre-determined protocol which inhibits masking of a protein within said sample, such that upon fragmentation or denaturation of said protein, at least one URS whose concentration is directly proportional to the concentration of said protein in said sample is produced.
- 75. The method of claim 74, wherein said masking of said protein is caused by protein-protein complexation, protein degradation or denaturing, post-translational modification, or environmentally induced alteration in protein structure.
- 76. The method of claim 74, wherein binding of said capture agent to said unique recognition sequence is detected qualitatively.
- 77. The method of claim 74, wherein binding of said capture agent to said unique recognition sequence is detected quantitatively.
- 78. Apparatus for simultaneously detecting the presence of plural specific proteins in a multi-protein sample, the apparatus comprising:
a plurality of immobilized capture agents for contact with said sample, said capture agents including at least a subset of capture agents which each respectively bind specifically with a unique recognition sequence, the presence of a particular unique recognition sequence being unambiguously indicative of the presence in said sample of a target protein from which it is derived, each of said unique recognition sequences being generated reproducibly by a predetermined proteolytic and/or denaturation protocol performed on a said sample comprising said target protein, and means for detecting binding between respective said capture agents and unique recognition sequences under the conditions which obtain in the sample after execution of the proteolytic and/or denaturation protocol.
- 79. The apparatus of claim 78, wherein said means for detecting binding events comprises means for detecting data indicative of the amount of bound unique recognition sequence thereby permitting assessment of the relative quantity of at least two target proteins in said sample.
- 80. A packaged protein detection array comprising:
(a) a plurality of different capture agents for detecting a plurality of different proteins in a sample, which capture agents are provided as an addressable array, and each of which capture agents selectively interacts with a unique recognition sequence (URS); and (b) instructions for
contacting the addressable array with a sample containing polypeptide analytes produced by denaturation and/or cleavage of proteins at amide backbone positions, and detecting interaction of said polypeptide analytes with said capture agent moieties.
- 81. The packaged protein detection array of claim 80, wherein the addressable array is an apparatus that comprises a plurality of said capture agents linked to a substrate in an array pattern of features.
- 82. The packaged protein detection array of claim 81, apparatus is coated with a layer to permit detection of binding of said capture agents with said polypeptide analytes by plasmon resonance detection.
- 83. The packaged protein detection array of claim 80, further including one or more labeled reference peptides including URS portions that bind to said capture agents, wherein said binding of said capture agents with said polypeptide analytes is detected by a competitive binding assay with said reference peptides.
- 84. The packaged protein detection array of claim 80, further including one or more antibodies which are immunoreactive with polypeptides including one of said URS, wherein said binding of said capture agents with said polypeptide analytes is detected by immunoassay.
- 85. The packaged protein detection array of claim 81, wherein the apparatus includes a grating comprised of a material having a high refractive index, a substrate layer that supports the two-dimensional grating, and said capture agents immobilized in discrete addressable locations on the surface of said grating opposite of the substrate layer such that, when said the apparatus is illuminated, a resonant grating effect is produced on reflected radiation in a manner dependent on the binding of a polypeptide analyte with a capture agent.
- 86. The packaged protein detection array of claim 80, wherein the addressable array is collection of beads, each of which comprises a discrete species of capture agent and one or more labels which identify the bead.
- 87. The packaged protein detection array of claim 80, wherein the plurality of different capture agents discriminate between unmodified and post-translationally modified forms of said unique recognition sequence (URS), and can unambiguously identify post-translationally modified forms of a protein in said sample.
- 88. The packaged protein detection array of claim 87, wherein said capture agents discriminate between post-translational modification of a protein selected from the group consisting of acetylation, amidation, deamidation, prenylation, formylation, glycosylation, hydroxylation, methylation, myristoylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, ribosylation and sulphation.
- 89. A business method for providing protein detection arrays, the method comprising:
(i) identifying one or more unique recognition sequence(s) (URSs) for each of one or more pre-determined protein(s); (ii) generating one or more capture agent(s) for each of said URSs identified in (i), each of said capture agent(s) specifically bind one of said URSs for which said capture agent(s) is generated; (iii) fabricating arrays of capture agent(s) generated in (ii), wherein each of said capture agents is bound to a different discrete region or address of said solid support; (iv) packaging said arrays of capture agent(s) in (iv) for use in diagnostic and/or research experimentation.
- 90. The business method of claim 89, further comprising marketing said arrays of capture agent(s).
- 91. The business method of claim 89, further comprising distributing said arrays of capture agent(s).
- 92. A system for manufacturing and selling detection assays, comprising:
a computer-based customer order component for ordering at least one of a plurality of capture agent detection assays; a detection assay production component for creating said capture agent detection assays; a shipping component for shipping said capture agent detection assays; and a billing component for billing a customer for said capture agent detection assays.
- 93. A composition comprising a plurality of capture agents, wherein said plurality of capture agents are, collectively, capable of specifically interacting with at least 25% of an organism's proteome, and wherein each of said capture agents is able to recognize and interact with only one unique recognition sequence within a protein of said proteome.
- 94. The composition of claim 93, wherein said capture agents are selected from the group consisting of: nucleotides; nucleic acids; PNA (peptide nucleic acids);
proteins; peptides; carbohydrates; artificial polymers; and small organic molecules.
- 95. The composition of claim 94, wherein said capture agents are antibodies, or antigen binding fragments thereof.
- 96. The composition of claim 95, wherein said capture agent is a full-length antibody, or a functional antibody fragment selected from: an Fab fragment, an F(ab′)2 fragment, an Fd fragment, an Fv fragment, a dAb fragment, an isolated complementarity determining region (CDR), a single chain antibody (scFv), or derivative thereof.
- 97. The composition of claim 95, wherein each of said capture agents is a single chain antibody.
- 98. The composition of claim 94, wherein said capture agents are aptamers.
- 99. The composition of claim 94, wherein said capture agents are scaffolded peptides.
- 100. The composition of claim 94, wherein said capture agents are small organic molecules.
- 101. The composition of claim 93, wherein said organism is human.
- 102. The composition of claim 93, wherein said organism is a bacterial organism, a viral organism, or a plant organism.
- 103. An apparatus for simultaneously detecting the presence of a plurality of proteins in a sample, comprising:
(i) a solid support to which are bound a plurality of capture agents, wherein each of said capture agents is able to specifically recognize and interact with a unique recognition sequence (URS) within a protein; and (ii) means for detecting the interaction of said capture agents with said corresponding unique recognition sequences.
- 104. The apparatus of claim 103, wherein said means for detecting the interaction of said capture agents with corresponding unique recognition sequences comprises means for quantitating the amount of said plurality of proteins in said sample.
- 105. Apparatus for simultaneously detecting the presence of a plural of specific proteins in a multi-protein sample, the apparatus comprising:
(a) a plurality of immobilized capture agents for contact with said sample, said capture agents including at least a subset of agents which respectively bind specifically with a unique recognition sequence, the presence of each said sequence being unambiguously indicative of the presence in said sample of a target protein from which it is derived, each said sequence being generated reproductively by a predetermined proteolytic protocol performed on a said sample comprising said target protein, and (b) means for detecting binding events between respective said capture agents and unique recognition sequence.
- 106. The apparatus of claim 105, wherein said means for detecting binding events comprises means for detecting data indicative of the amount of bound unique recognition sequence thereby permitting assessment of the relative quantity of at least two target proteins in said sample.
- 107. A method for preparing an array of capture agents, comprising:
(a) providing a plurality of isolated unique recognition sequences (URSs), said plurality of URSs derived from proteins comprising at least 50% of an organism's proteome; (b) generating a plurality of capture agents, each capable of specifically binding one of said plurality of URSs; and (c) attaching said plurality of capture agents to a support having a plurality of discrete regions, wherein each of said capture agents is bound to a different discrete region, thereby preparing an array of capture agents.
- 108. The method of claim 107, wherein each of said capture agents specifically recognize and binds a non-redundant URS.
- 109. A business method for generating arrays of capture agents for marketing in research and development, the method comprising:
(a) identifying one or more unique recognition sequence(s) (URSs) for each of one or more pre-determined protein(s); (b) generating one or more capture agent(s) for each of said URSs identified in (1), each of said capture agent(s) specifically bind one of said URSs for which said capture agent(s) is generated; (c) fabricating arrays of capture agent(s) generated in (2) on solid support, wherein each of said capture agents is bound to a different discrete region of said solid support; (d) packaging said arrays of capture agent(s) in (3) for diagnosis and/or research use in commercial and/or academic laboratories.
- 110. The business method of claim 109, further comprising marketing said arrays of capture agent(s) in (c) or said packaged arrays of capture agent(s) in (d) to potential customers and/or distributors.
- 111. The business method of claim 109, further comprising distributing said arrays of capture agent(s) in (c) or said packaged arrays of capture agent(s) in (d) to customers and/or distributors.
- 112. A business method for generating arrays of capture agents for marketing in research and development, the method comprising:
(a) identifying one or more unique recognition sequence(s) (URSs) for each of one or more pre-determined protein(s); (b) licensing to a third party the right to manufacture or use said one or more unique recognition sequence(s).
- 113. A method for quantitating various forms of post-translationally modified proteins in a biological sample, comprising
providing an addressable array having a multitude of features, each feature independently including a capture agent for detecting a protein in an unmodified or modified state, each of which capture agents selectively interacts with a unique recognition sequence (URS), and each feature providing discriminating binding to a particular modified and unmodified form of said URS occurring in a protein of the test sample; contacting the array with a solution of soluble polypeptide analytes produced by denaturation and/or cleavage of proteins from the test sample, said soluble polypeptide analytes being produced under conditions to preserve post-translational modification; and determining the identity and amount of post-translationally modified proteins in the sample from the interaction of said polypeptide analytes with said capture agents.
- 114. The method of claim 113, wherein said capture agent(s) specifically interacts and discriminates between a post-translational modification of the reference protein selected from the group consisting of acetylation, amidation, deamidation, prenylation, formylation, glycosylation, hydroxylation, methylation, myristoylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, ribosylation and sulphation.
- 115. A packaged protein detection array comprising
(a) an addressable array having a plurality of features, each feature independently including
a discrete type of capture agent that selectively interacts with a unique recognition sequence (URS) of an analyte protein under conditions in which the analyte protein is a soluble protein produced by proteolysis and/or denaturation, wherein said features of said array are disposed in a pattern or with a label to provide identity of interactions with capture agents can be ascertained; (b) instructions for
contacting the addressable array with a sample containing polypeptide analytes produced by denaturation and/or cleavage of proteins at amide backbone positions, detecting interaction of said polypeptide analytes with said capture agent moieties; and determining the identity of polypeptide analytes, or native proteins from which they are derived, based on interaction with capture agent moieties.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/379,626, filed on May 10, 2002; U.S. Provisional Application Nos. 60/393,137, 60/393,233, 60/393,235, 60/393,211, 60/393,223, 60/393,280, and 60/393,197, all filed on Jul. 1, 2002; U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/430,948, filed on Dec. 4, 2002; and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/433319 filed on Dec. 13, 2002, the entire contents of each of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (10)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60379626 |
May 2002 |
US |
|
60393137 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60393233 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60393235 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60393211 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60393223 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60393280 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60393197 |
Jul 2002 |
US |
|
60430948 |
Dec 2002 |
US |
|
60433319 |
Dec 2002 |
US |