| Literature DB >> 32435163 |
Fumio Nomura1, Sachio Tsuchida1, Syota Murata2, Mamoru Satoh1, Kazuyuki Matsushita2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The most successful application of mass spectrometry (MS) in laboratory medicine is identification (ID) of microorganisms using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) in blood stream infection. We describe MALDI-TOF MS-based bacterial ID with particular emphasis on the methods so far developed to directly identify microorganisms from positive blood culture bottles with MALDI-TOF MS including our own protocols. We touch upon the increasing roles of Liquid chromatography (LC) coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) as well. MAIN BODY: Because blood culture bottles contain a variety of nonbacterial proteins that may interfere with analysis and interpretation, appropriate pretreatments are prerequisites for successful ID. Pretreatments include purification of bacterial pellets and short-term subcultures to form microcolonies prior to MALDI-TOF MS analysis. Three commercial protocols are currently available: the Sepsityper® kit (Bruker Daltonics), the Vitek MS blood culture kit (bioMerieux, Inc.), and the rapid BACpro® II kit (Nittobo Medical Co., Tokyo). Because these commercially available kits are costly and bacterial ID rates using these kits are not satisfactory, particularly for Gram-positive bacteria, various home-brew protocols have been developed: 1. Stepwise differential sedimentation of blood cells and microorganisms, 2. Combination of centrifugation and lysis procedures, 3. Lysis-vacuum filtration, and 4. Centrifugation and membrane filtration technique (CMFT). We prospectively evaluated the performance of this CMFT protocol compared with that of Sepsityper® using 170 monomicrobial positive blood cultures. Although preliminary, the performance of the CMFT was significantly better than that of Sepsityper®, particularly for Gram-positive isolates. MALDI-TOF MS-based testing of polymicrobial blood specimens, however, is still challenging. Also, its contribution to assessment of susceptibility and resistance to antibiotics is still limited. For this purpose, liquid chromatography (LC) coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) should be more useful because this approach can identify as many as several thousand peptide sequences.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteremia; Blood stream infection; Centrifugation and membrane filtration technique (CMFT); Liquid chromatography (LC) coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS); MALDI Biotyper; Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS); Rapid BACpro II; Sepsityper; Vitex MS
Year: 2020 PMID: 32435163 PMCID: PMC7222329 DOI: 10.1186/s12014-020-09278-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Proteomics ISSN: 1542-6416 Impact factor: 3.988
Applications of mass spectrometry to laboratory medicine
| GC/MS |
| Toxicology |
| Inborn errors of metabolism |
| Metabolomics |
| MALDI-TOF MS |
| Clinical microbiology |
| Imaging MS |
| LC/MS/MS |
| Inborn errors of metabolism |
| Therapeutic drug monitoring |
| Toxicology |
| Endocrinology |
| Targeted metabolomics, peptidomics and proteomics |
| Clinical microbiology |
Fig. 1The time required from the point when blood culture bottles are flagged as positive to reporting of the pathogenic bacterial species before and after MALDI-TOF MS implementation in the clinical microbiology laboratory at Chiba University Hospital
Fig. 2Numbers of publications including three key words, MALDI + bacteria + infection or LC–MS/MS + bacteria + infection identified with the PubMed search conducted on March 25, 2020
The representative examples of LC/MS/MS protocols used in the clinical microbiology field
| Instrument type | Analytical method | Purpose | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QqQ | SRM/MRM | (Quantitative analysis) | Target analysis (Resistance, Virulence) | [ |
| Q-TOF | DDA/DIA | (Qualitative and Quantitative analysis) | Identification, Target analysis | [ |
| Q or IT-Orbitrap | DDA/DIA | (Qualitative and Quantitative analysis) | Identification | [ |
| Q-IT-Orbitrap | DDA/DIA | (Qualitative and Quantitative analysis) | Identification | [ |
Q quadrupole, IT ion trap, SRM Selected Reaction Monitoring, MRM Multiple Reaction Monitoring, DDA Data dependent acquisition, DIA Data independent acquisition