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Comprehensive profiling of antibody responses to the human anellome using programmable phage display

Thiagarajan Venkataraman, Harish Swaminathan, Cesar Arze, Sarah Melissa P Jacobo, Agamoni Bhattacharyya, Tyler David, Dhananjay M. Nawandar, Simon Delagrave, Vinidhra Mani, Nathan L. Yozwiak, H. Benjamin Larman

2022Cell Reports28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anelloviruses represent a major constituent of the commensal human virome; however, little is known about their immunobiology. Here, we present "AnelloScan," a T7 phage library representing the open reading frame 1 (ORF1), ORF2, ORF3, and torque teno virus (TTV)-derived apoptosis-inducing protein (TAIP) sequences of more than 800 human anelloviruses and profile the antibody reactivities of serum samples from a cross-sectional cohort of 156 subjects by using phage-immunoprecipitation sequencing (PhIP-Seq). A majority of anellovirus peptides are not reactive in any of the subjects tested (n = ∼28,000; ∼85% of the library). Antibody-reactive peptides are largely restricted to the C-terminal region of the capsid protein ORF1. Moreover, using a longitudinal cohort of matched blood-transfusion donors and recipients, we find that most transmitted anelloviruses do not elicit a detectable antibody reactivity in the recipient and that the remainder elicit delayed responses appearing ∼100-150 days after transfusion.

Topics & Concepts

Phage displayAntibodyVirologyBiologyTorque teno virusImmunoprecipitationCapsidOpen reading frameVirusMolecular biologyImmunologyGeneticsPeptide sequencePolymerase chain reactionGeneAnimal Virus Infections StudiesVirus-based gene therapy researchBacteriophages and microbial interactions