| Literature DB >> 26449888 |
Peter D Burbelo1,2, Jason Keller3, Jason Wagner4, James S Klimavicz5, Ahmad Bayat6, Craig S Rhodes7, Bassirou Diarra8, Ploenchan Chetchotisakd9, Yupin Suputtamongkol10, Sasisopin Kiertiburanakul11, Steven M Holland12, Sarah K Browne13, Sophia Siddiqui14, Joseph A Kovacs15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is an urgent need for a simple and accurate test for the diagnosis of human Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the infectious agent causing tuberculosis (TB). Here we describe a serological test based on light emitting recombinant proteins for the diagnosis of pulmonary Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26449888 PMCID: PMC4599810 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-015-0545-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
LIPS testing of TB proteins using cohort 1 sera
| Rv number | Protein Name | Seropositivitya as a C-terminal Gateway fusion protein (pREN5-ATT) | Seropositivitya as a C-terminal fusion protein (pREN2) | Seropositivitya as a N-terminal fusion protein (pREN3S) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rv3875* | ESAT-6 | 0/14 | 0/14 | |
| Rv2185c* | TB16.3 | 1/14 | 0/14 | |
| Rv3354* | TB9.7 | 0/14 | 0/14 | |
| Rv1636* | TB15.3 | 0/14 | ||
| Rv3208A* | TB9.4 | ND | ||
| Rv1926c* | Mpt63 | 0/14 | ||
| Rv0652* | L7 | 7/14 | ||
| Rv0538* | PTRP | 0/14 | ||
| Rv3874* | cfp10 | 0/14 | 1/14 | 1/14 |
| Rv3881c | EspB | 0/14 | 6/14 | 4/14 |
| Rv0129c | FbpC | 0/14 | 0/14 | 0/14 |
| Rv0054 | Ssb | 0/14 | 0/14 | 1/14 |
| Rv2875 | Mpt70 | 0/14 | 0/14 | 0/14 |
| Rv0934 | PstS1 | 0/14 | 1/14 | |
| Rv1980c | Mpt64 | 0/14 | 2/14 | |
| Rv3841 | BfrB | 0/14 | 4/14 | |
| Rv0831c | Hypoth. | 0/14 | 4/16 | |
| Rv2608 | PPE42 | 0/14 | 0/14 | |
| Rv2462c | TIG | ND | ||
| Rv3804c | FbpA | 0/14 | 4/14 | |
| Rv1411c | LprG | ND | ||
| Rv0815c | CysA2 | 0/14 | 0/14 | |
| Rv2031c | HspX | 1/14 | 0/14 | |
| Rv1660 | Pks10 | 0/14 |
aFor screening of MTB proteins with Cohort 1 patients (n = 14), shown is the number of seropositive samples detected with values greater than twice the buffer blanks
ND not determined due to poor LU activity
Rv numbers with an asterisk denotes MTB antigen DNA created from synthetic genes
Fig. 1Schematic of the LIPS assay. DNA sequence of the MTB antigens of interest are genetically fused to the N- or C-terminus of Renilla luciferase (Ruc). These recombinant plasmids are then used to transfect Cos1 cells and cell lysate is harvested without purification. Aliquots of extract containing the Ruc-MTB antigen are then incubated with serum samples. The antibody complexes are then captured by protein A/G beads and the unbound luciferase tagged antigen is removed by extensive washing. The amount of specific antibody is determined by the amount of bound MTB-Ruc antigen present, which is determined by adding luciferase substrate and detection of luminescence
Fig. 2LIPS detection of antibody levels to the eight most informative MTB proteins. Antibodies against eight antigens including PstS1, FbpA, Rv0831C, EspB, Ssb, HspX, BfrB and Mpt64, were measured by LIPS. Each symbol represents individual samples from cohort 2 including 53 with pulmonary TB, 7 with disseminated TB and 22 controls. Each symbol represents individual subjects with antibody levels in light units (LU) plotted on the Y-axis using a log10 scale. The cut-off value for each antigen is shown by the dotted line and was based on the mean plus 3SD of the control group. Only statistically significant p values between the controls and the TB patients are shown and were calculated using the Mann Whitney U test with a Bonferroni adjusted P value = 0.006
Fig. 3Heat map representation of patient antibody profiles against MTB antigens. Antibody responses of each TB-infected subject against eight MTB antigens was color-coded using the Z-score scale shown on the right representing the number of standard deviations above the mean of the controls for that antigen. Coloring in the heat map indicates that the relative antibody levels are at least greater than the mean of the controls plus three standard deviations. The pulmonary TB (P-TB) and extrapulmonary TB (E-TB; grey coded) patients are listed on the left and rank ordered based on immunoreactivity with the eight MTB antigens
Fig. 4The sum of the seven individual tests or the LIPS mixture assay for TB diagnosis. a Antibodies in cohort 2 were evaluated by summation of the seven separate LIPS tests. The cut-off used (stippled line) was derived from the mean plus 3 standard deviations of controls from cohort 2. b A seven antigen LIPS mixture was used to evaluate antibodies in cohort 2 and an additional control set (cohort 3) of healthy US blood donors. The stippled line and dotted lines are the cut-offs derived from the mean plus 3 standard deviations of controls from cohort 2 and cohort 3, respectively
Fig. 5Comparison of the LIPS mixture test with the sum of seven individual tests for detecting antibodies for diagnosis of TB. Antibody levels from the LIPS mixture test (Y-axis) was plotted against the sum (X-axis) of the levels of the individual antibody levels against PstS1, Rv0831c, FbpA, EspB, BfrB, HspX and ssb. Each circle represents a TB patient or control subject. The correlation between the two tests showed an R 2 = 0.85