4.3 Article

Screening of sperm antigen epitopes by phage display technique and its preliminary clinical application

Journal

BASIC AND CLINICAL ANDROLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12610-022-00172-w

Keywords

Phage display technique; Sperm antigen; Mimotope; Immunological infertility; Antisperm antibody; Standardization

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This study successfully obtained sperm antigen mimotopes using the phage display technique and established an ELISA method for the detection of antisperm antibody (AsAb). The study found that the ELISA method using the mimotopes as antigens can effectively detect AsAb in clinical samples.
Background: At present, there is a lack of standardized preparation methods of sperm antigen for the detection of antisperm antibody (AsAb). To screen sperm antigen mimotopes from a phage display random peptide library and use them to establish an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of AsAb, immunoglobulins were extracted from the sera of rabbits with positive AsAb and negative AsAb, respectively, by the saturated ammonium sulfate method, and a phage display 12-mer peptide library was affinity panned by the extracted immunoglobins coated on the ELISA plate. Then, the obtained positive phage clones were identified by ELISA and sent for sequencing and peptides synthesis. Last, a diagnostic ELISA was established to detect clinical serum and seminal plasma samples. Results: A total of sixty phage clones were chosen by affinity panning, and sixteen of them reacted positively with AsAb in indirect ELISA and sandwich ELISA. Following DNA sequencing and translation, the peptide sequences of the sixteen positive clones were obtained. By comparison in Blast database, four of sixteen positive clones were found to be closely related to male reproduction. Two (#1 and #25) of four mimotopes were synthesized, and an ELISA method was established using the two mimotopes as sperm specific antigens. One hundred and thirty-four serum samples and seventy-four seminal plasma samples from infertile couples were analyzed by the established ELISA with #1 and #25 mimotopes, respectively. The positive rates of AsAb in serum samples were 20.15% (27/134) for #1 and 11.19% (15/134) for #25, respectively, and the coincidence rate between them was 91.04% (122/134). The positive rates of AsAb in seminal plasma samples were 1.35% (1/74) for both #1 and #25, and the coincidence rate was 100%. Conclusion: Sperm antigen mimotopes can be obtained successfully by the phage display technique, and can be used as standard sperm specific antigens to establish an ELISA method for the detection of AsAb.

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