Recognition of Higher Order Patterns in Proteins: Immunologic Kernels

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Abstract

By applying analysis of the principal components of amino acid physical properties we predicted cathepsin cleavage sites, MHC binding affinity, and probability of B-cell epitope binding of peptides in tetanus toxin and in ten diverse additional proteins. Cross-correlation of these metrics, for peptides of all possible amino acid index positions, each evaluated in the context of a ±25 amino acid flanking region, indicated that there is a strongly repetitive pattern of short peptides of approximately thirty amino acids each bounded by cathepsin cleavage sites and each comprising B-cell linear epitopes, MHC-I and MHC-II binding peptides. Such "immunologic kernel" peptides comprise all signals necessary for adaptive immunologic cognition, response and recall. The patterns described indicate a higher order spatial integration that forms a symbolic logic coordinating the adaptive immune system. © 2013 Bremel, Homan.

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Bremel, R. D., & Homan, E. J. (2013). Recognition of Higher Order Patterns in Proteins: Immunologic Kernels. PLoS ONE, 8(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070115

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