Author:
Magni Ruben,Almofee Raghad,Yusuf Sameen,Mueller Claudius,Vuong Ngoc,Almosuli Mahmood,Hoang Minh Thu,Meade Katherine,Sethi Ish,Mohammed Nuha,Araujo Robyn,McDonald Teresa Kaza,Marcelli Paul,Espina Virginia,Kim Brianna,Garritsen Anja,Green Christine,Russo Paul,Zhou Weidong,Vaisman Iosif,Petricoin Emanuel F.,Hoadley Deborah,Molestina Robert E.,McIntyre Hope,Liotta Lance A.,Luchini Alessandra
Abstract
Abstract
Mass spectrometry enhanced by nanotechnology can achieve previously unattainable sensitivity for characterizing urinary pathogen-derived peptides. We utilized mass spectrometry enhanced by affinity hydrogel particles (analytical sensitivity = 2.5 pg/mL) to study tick pathogen-specific proteins shed in the urine of patients with (1) erythema migrans rash and acute symptoms, (2) post treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS), and (3) clinical suspicion of tick-borne illnesses (TBI). Targeted pathogens were Borrelia, Babesia, Anaplasma, Rickettsia, Ehrlichia, Bartonella, Francisella, Powassan virus, tick-borne encephalitis virus, and Colorado tick fever virus. Specificity was defined by 100% amino acid sequence identity with tick-borne pathogen proteins, evolutionary taxonomic verification for related pathogens, and no identity with human or other organisms. Using a cut off of two pathogen peptides, 9/10 acute Lyme Borreliosis patients resulted positive, while we identified zero false positive in 250 controls. Two or more pathogen peptides were identified in 40% of samples from PTLDS and TBI patients (categories 2 and 3 above, n = 59/148). Collectively, 279 distinct unique tick-borne pathogen derived peptides were identified. The number of pathogen specific peptides was directly correlated with presence or absence of symptoms reported by patients (ordinal regression pseudo-R2 = 0.392, p = 0.010). Enhanced mass spectrometry is a new tool for studying tick-borne pathogen infections.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Virginia Legslature
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
8 articles.
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