| Literature DB >> 26277871 |
Guo-Zhong Tao1, Bo Liu1, Rong Zhang1, Gigi Liu2, Fizan Abdullah3, Mary Cay Harris4, Mary L Brandt5, Richard A Ehrenkranz6, Corinna Bowers7, Camilia R Martin8, R Lawrence Moss7, Karl G Sylvester9.
Abstract
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is the most common gastrointestinal (GI) medical/surgical emergency of the newborn and a leading cause of preterm neonate morbidity and mortality. NEC is a challenge to diagnose since it often shares similar clinical features with neonatal sepsis. In the present study, plasma protein profiling was compared among NEC, sepsis and control cohorts using gel electrophoresis, immunoblot and mass spectrometry. We observed significant impairment in the formation of fibrinogen-γ dimers (FGG-dimer) in the plasma of newborns with NEC that could efficiently differentiate NEC and sepsis with a high level of sensitivity and specificity. Interestingly, the impaired FGG-dimer formation could be restored in NEC plasma by the addition of exogenous active factor XIII (FXIII). Enzymatic activity of FXIII was determined to be significantly lower in NEC subject plasma for crosslinking FGG when compared to sepsis. These findings demonstrate a potential novel biomarker and related biologic mechanism for diagnosing NEC, as well as suggest a possible therapeutic strategy.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26277871 PMCID: PMC4642514 DOI: 10.1038/srep13119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study design for discovery of potential plasma biomarkers to distinguish NEC and neonatal sepsis.
Figure 2Lack of crosslinked FGG-dimers in plasma can efficiently differentiates NEC from neonatal sepsis.
(A) Crosslinked FGG species are absent from the plasma of infants with NEC. Equal amounts of pooled plasma (n = 5) from indicated groups were separated on SDS-PAGE, followed by immunoblot using a monoclonal antibody to FGG. Notably, FGG-monomers (indicated by asterisk) were detected in all four groups (lanes 1–14); in contrast, a FGG-dimer species (~100 kDa, indicated by arrow) was detectable only in sepsis (lanes 9–12) and control (lanes 13, 14) but not in NEC-M/S (lanes 1–8) plasmas. (B) FGG-dimer formation was individually analyzed in each sample by immunoblot using FGG antibody followed by density analysis of the identified protein bands using ImageJ software. (C) Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis for assessment of potential clinical utility. The data from panel-2B was statistically analyzed by ROC curve and demonstrated superior sensitivity and specificity (AUC = 0.958). (D) Addition of exogenous FXIIIa in vitro restored FGG-dimer formation in NEC samples. Pooled NEC (M/S) plasmas were incubated with (lane-2) or without (lane-1) exogenous active FXIII for 10 min. Dimer-formation was assessed by immunoblot using FGG-antibody. Note that the exogenous FXIII-induced reconstitution of FGG-dimers suggests a likely impairment of FXIII activity in NEC.
Figure 3Absence of cross-linked FGG-dimers is correlated with insufficient enzymatic activity of FXIII in the plasma of NEC patients.
(A) Reduced plasma level of FXIII in NEC patients. Quantitative measurement was performed among the indicated groups using sandwich ELISA. Plasma levels of FXIII in NEC is significantly reduced when compared to control or sepsis cohorts. (B) Crosslinking activity of endogenous FXIII was assessed in vitro by FGG-dimer formation after the addition of FXIII activators. Pooled NEC and sepsis plasmas were incubated with the same amount of CaCl2 and thrombin (known FXIII activator) at 25 °C (lanes 1–3, 5–7) or 37 °C (lanes 4, 8) for the indicated time points. Dimer formation was detected by immunoblot using FGG-antibody. A representative result is shown from three independent experiments. (C) Reduced enzymatic activity of FXIII in NEC plasma. The protein band densities of immunoblot of panel-C were scanned, analyzed using NIH imageJ software and graphed for relative comparisons. Note that the rates of newly formed dimer vs. total (dimer + monomer) FGG bands are significantly lower in NEC compared to sepsis samples at 5 or 60 min, indicating that plasma from NEC subjects has lower enzymatic activity of FXIII than sepsis. (D) Schematic working model for the impact of reduced FXIII activity on intestinal “wound healing” in NEC patients. FXIIIa functions as a transglutaminase to covalently crosslink two molecules of FGG at the last step of the blood coagulant cascade. Without this step thrombus forms on “wounds” but is unstable, readily breaking down especially in the GI-tract given the constant exposure to both digestive enzymes and peristaltic movement. It is conceivable that this consequently delays the healing process of intestinal injuries in GI-diseases like NEC.
Demographic information of human preterm infants chosen by this study.
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 25 (62.5%) | 9 (47.4%) | 12 (50%) | 0.451b |
| Female | 15 (37.5%) | 10 (52.6%) | 12 (50%) | |
| Race | ||||
| Asian | 6 (15%) | 3 (15.8%) | 3 (12.5%) | 0.091b |
| Black | 13 (32.5%) | 1 (5.3%) | 9 (37.5%) | |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific | 0 (0%) | 1 (5.3%) | 0 (0%) | |
| White | 20 (50%) | 10 (52.6%) | 10 (41.7%) | |
| Other | 1 (2.5) | 4 (21%) | 2 (8.3%) | |
| Gestational Agea (weeks) | 27.7 ± 3.3 | 27.7 ± 2.7 | 28.3 ± 2.9 | 0.736c |
| Birth Weighta (grams) | 1034.6 ± 448.6 | 1052.9 ± 441.0 | 1093.9 ± 473.9 | 0.880c |
(aData is shown by mean ± SD; p-value is calculated by Chi-squareb or one-way ANOVAc test).