| Literature DB >> 25678897 |
Mary F Lopez1, Bryan Krastins1, David A Sarracino1, Gregory Byram1, Maryann S Vogelsang1, Amol Prakash1, Scott Peterman1, Shadab Ahmad1, Gouri Vadali1, Wenjun Deng2, Ignacio Inglessis2, Tom Wickham2, Kathleen Feeney2, G William Dec2, Igor Palacios2, Ferdinando S Buonanno2, Eng H Lo2, MingMing Ning2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The anatomy of PFO suggests that it can allow thrombi and potentially harmful circulatory factors to travel directly from the venous to the arterial circulation - altering circulatory phenotype. Our previous publication using high-resolution LC-MS/MS to profile protein and peptide expression patterns in plasma showed that albumin was relatively increased in donor samples from PFO-related than other types of ischemic strokes. Since albumin binds a host of molecules and acts as a carrier for lipoproteins, small molecules and drugs, we decided to investigate the albumin-bound proteins (in a similar sample cohort) in an effort to unravel biological changes and potentially discover biomarkers related to PFO-related stroke and PFO endovascular closure.Entities:
Keywords: Albumin; Biomarker; Cerebrovascular disease; Discovery; Ischemic stroke; Mass spectrometry; PFO; Patent foramen ovale; Proteomics; Stroke
Year: 2015 PMID: 25678897 PMCID: PMC4305391 DOI: 10.1186/1559-0275-12-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Proteomics ISSN: 1542-6416 Impact factor: 3.988
PFO stroke patient characteristics in separate validation cohort (n = 104)
| Patient characteristics (n = 104) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Age | 51.09 ± 12.02 | |
| Male | 55 (52.88%) | |
| White | 89 (85.58%) | |
| Diabetes | 9 (8.65%) | |
| Hypertension | 41 (39.42%) | |
| Coronary artery disease | 7 (6.73%) | |
| Migraine | 31 (29.81%) | |
| Current smoker | 17 (16.35%) | |
| Alcohol | 43 (41.35%) | |
| History of stroke/TIA | 39 (37.50%) | |
| Hyperlipidemia | 32 (30.77%) | |
| Lipid_Lowering_Agent | 71 (68.27%) | |
| Pre-closure 60 (57.69%) | Post-closure 69 (66.35%) | |
All patients had CLIO certified cholesterol and HDL measured pre and post PFO closure at the same time interval as the exploratory cohort.
Figure 1Specificity of anti-albumin MSIA enrichment: Binding characteristics of peptide VQH[Oxid]LGA[A_42]PVT[Phosphoryl]LRAS[Phosphoryl]YLEIYNEQVR from Kinesin-like protein to MSIA micro columns activated with either anti-albumin or anti-beta lactoglobulin, antibodies.
Donor sample set processed with immuno-enrichment and MS for identification and analysis of albumin-bound proteins
| Type of sample | Time point | n |
|---|---|---|
| PFO Closure | Baseline | 16 |
| PFO Closure | 3-12 month Follow Up | 5 |
| PFO No Closure | Baseline | 5 |
| PFO No Closure | 3-12 month Follow Up | 5 |
Figure 2Distribution of albumin-bound proteins in PFO closure no-closure sample sets. Specificity for albumin-binding was assumed when binding to the negative control (anti-BL Ab) was less than binding to the anti-albumin Ab (ratio <0.5). Eight proteins were present in both sample sets and their abundance ratios and ROC AUC scores are given in Table 3. All 8 proteins present in both sample sets have been previously identified in HDL (26).
Abundance ratios and ROC AUC of albumin-bound proteins common to both PFO Closure and No Closure stroke samples
| GI | Protein | ROC AUC baseline Closure/Follow up | ROC AUC baseline No Closure/Follow up | Ratio baseline Closure/Follow up | Ratio baseline No Closure/Follow up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4557321 | apolipoprotein A-I preproprotein [Homo sapiens] | 0.950 | 0.76 | 1.46 | 1.26 |
| 4557323 | apolipoprotein C-III precursor [Homo sapiens] | 0.89 | 0.76 | 2.00 | 1.17 |
| 19923106 | serum paraoxonase/arylesterase 1 precursor [Homo sapiens] | 0.87 | 0.80 | 1.69 | 1.26 |
| 4502157 | apolipoprotein C-I precursor [Homo sapiens] | 0.87 | 0.52* | 0.92 | 0.9 |
| 32483410 | vitamin D-binding protein isoform 1 precursor [Homo sapiens] | 0.87 | 0.80 | 2.16 | 1.53 |
| 32130518 | apolipoprotein C-II precursor [Homo sapiens] | 0.84 | 0.80 | 0.92 | 1.35 |
| 4504893 | kininogen-1 isoform 2 precursor [Homo sapiens] | 0.655* | 0.92 | 0.85 | 1.35 |
| 4502149 | apolipoprotein A-II preproprotein [Homo sapiens] | 0.628* | 0.684* | 0.92 | 1.08 |
*poor classification.
Figure 3IPA downstream analysis of differently abundant albumin-bound proteins in PFO closure no-closure sample sets. The IPA biological function downstream analysis is based on z-score and p-value. In our analyses, the z-score values indicated that a function was expected to be increased (positive z-score) or decreased (negative z-score) in PFO closure relative to no-closure samples.
Figure 4HDL and Cholesterol levels measured by colorimetric assay in samples before and after stroke–related PFO closure. HDL and cholesterol were measured in a separate validation cohort (n = 104, Table 1). All patients had CLIO certified cholesterol and HDL measured pre and post PFO closure at the same time interval as the exploratory cohort. Conditional logistic regression analysis (Table 4) demonstrated that cholesterol levels were statistically decreased (p-value 0.0007) and HDL levels were statistically increased (p-value 0.0031) post PFO closure when compared to baseline levels.
Conditional logistic regression analysis
| Conditional logistic regression analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Variables | B | Odd ratio (95% confidence interval) | P-value |
| HDL | −0.0567 | 0.9449 (0.8973, 0.9950) | 0.0315 |
| CHOL | 0.0214 | 1.0217 (1.0055, 1.0381) | 0.0085 |
| Lipid-lowing Agent | −0.8454 | 0.4294 (0.0850, 2.1695) | 0.3064 |
In the validation cohort, after adjusting for confounders such as lipid lowering agent, HDL and cholesterol remain (statistically significantly) changed post-PFO closure.