| Literature DB >> 33195320 |
Eiva Bernotiene1, Edvardas Bagdonas1, Gailute Kirdaite2, Paulius Bernotas1, Ursule Kalvaityte1, Ilona Uzieliene1, Christian S Thudium3, Heidi Hannula4, Gabriela S Lorite4, Mona Dvir-Ginzberg5, Ali Guermazi6, Ali Mobasheri1,7,8,9.
Abstract
Biomarkers, especially biochemical markers, are important in osteoarthritis (OA) research, clinical trials, and drug development and have potential for more extensive use in therapeutic monitoring. However, they have not yet had any significant impact on disease diagnosis and follow-up in a clinical context. Nevertheless, the development of immunoassays for the detection and measurement of biochemical markers in OA research and therapy is an active area of research and development. The evaluation of biochemical markers representing low-grade inflammation or extracellular matrix turnover may permit OA prognosis and expedite the development of personalized treatment tailored to fit particular disease severities. However, currently detection methods have failed to overcome specific hurdles such as low biochemical marker concentrations, patient-specific variation, and limited utility of single biochemical markers for definitive characterization of disease status. These challenges require new and innovative approaches for development of detection and quantification systems that incorporate clinically relevant biochemical marker panels. Emerging platforms and technologies that are already on the way to implementation in routine diagnostics and monitoring of other diseases could potentially serve as good technological and strategic examples for better assessment of OA. State-of-the-art technologies such as advanced multiplex assays, enhanced immunoassays, and biosensors ensure simultaneous screening of a range of biochemical marker targets, the expansion of detection limits, low costs, and rapid analysis. This paper explores the implementation of such technologies in OA research and therapy. Application of novel immunoassay-based technologies may shed light on poorly understood mechanisms in disease pathogenesis and lead to the development of clinically relevant biochemical marker panels. More sensitive and specific biochemical marker immunodetection will complement imaging biomarkers and ensure evidence-based comparisons of intervention efficacy. We discuss the challenges hindering the development, testing, and implementation of new OA biochemical marker assays utilizing emerging multiplexing technologies and biosensors.Entities:
Keywords: biochemical marker; biosensors; immunodetection; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); multiplexing technologies; nanotechnology; osteoarthritis (OA)
Year: 2020 PMID: 33195320 PMCID: PMC7609858 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2020.572977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Application of advanced technologies for immunodetection of osteoarthritis biomarkers.
Multiplex assays-based studies in OA.
| Milliplex MAP human cytokine/chemokine panel (42 analytes) | Luminex | Serum and synovial fluid, hip and knee | IL-6, MDC and IP-10 correlated with hip OA. IL-6, MDC, and IP10 were associated with pain in the hip cohort. MCP-1 and MIP-1β were highly expressed in the knee OA | ( |
| LINCOplex™ Immunoassay (21 analytes) | Luminex | Knee synovial fluid | MCP-1, MIP-1, IL-2, IL-5 elevated in advanced OA (ICRS scale) | ( |
| Pro-human cytokine multiplex assay (33 analytes) | Luminex | Knee synovial fluid | IL-10, IL-12, IL-13, SCGF-β, VEGF correlated with knee pain and function. IL-6, IL-8, IFN-γ, SCGF-β, VEGF, CXCL1 were associated with OA severity (KL scoring) | ( |
| Human Luminex Screening Assay (10 analytes) | Luminex | Knee synovial protein extracts | VEGF was decreased in symptomatic OA vs. asymptomatic OA patients' samples. MMP-1 protein increased in OA vs. postmortem controls | ( |
| Myriad Human InflammationMAP® 1.0 multiplex immunoassay (47 analytes) | Luminex | Synovial fluid | VEGF, MMP-3, TIMP-1, sICAM-1, sVCAM-1, MCP-1 related to synovial inflammation in OA, radiographic and symptom severity | ( |
| BioLegend LEGENDplex human adipokine flow cytometry-based ELISA (13 analytes) | Flow cytometer | Knee synovium cells (24 h cultures | IL-6 expression was highest in mesenchymal cells vs. hemopoietic. One of the patient-specific inflammatory clusters identified had high tissue and mesenchymal cell IL-6 and IL-8 release | ( |
| SPRi multiplex assay (9 analytes) | IBIS MX96 | Serum and synovial fluid | Early OA markers—IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, IFN-γ, IL-10, CCL2, IL-8, IL-4, and C3F high sensitivity (low pg/ml) detection system. Undergoing validation in patient cohort | ( |
| Microfluidic FMGC (2 analytes) | Microfluidics | Serum and urine | Simultaneous detection of sCTX-II and uCTX-II. 24-fold and 3.5-fold shorter completion time than the ELISA for urinary and serum CTX-II | ( |
IL-1β, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13, interleukin 1β, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13; MDC, macrophage-derived chemokine; IP-10, interferon gamma-induced protein 10; MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; MIP-1, 1β, macrophage inflammatory protein 1, 1β; ICRS, International Cartilage Repair Society; SCGF-β, stem cell growth factor β; TIMP-1, metallopeptidase inhibitor 1; sICAM-1, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1; sVCAM-1, soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule-1; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; IFN-γ, interferon gamma; CXCL1, C–X–C motif chemokine ligand 1; KL score, Kellgren and Lawrence score; MMP-1, 3, matrix metallopeptidase 1, 3; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; CCL2, C–C motif chemokine ligand 2; C3F, complement C3 peptide fragment; FMGC, microfluidic fluoro-microbeads guiding chip; sCTX-II and uCTX-II, serum/urinary C-telopeptide fragments of type II collagen.
Enhanced immunoassays for detection of biochemical markers relevant to OA.
| Quantitative lateral flow immunoassay using antibody-conjugated gold nanoparticles | OA patient SF | COMP | Cost effectiveness | Dynamic detection range: 0.6–20 μg/mL | ( |
| Quantum dot-linked immunosorbent assay (with immobilized orientation-directed half-part antibodies) | Antigen solution | IL-6 | High sensitivity | Lower LOD: 50 pg/Ml | ( |
| SENSIA | Pooled human serum | 15-Plex (including IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, MMP-9, TNF-α) | Cost effectiveness | IL-1β, IL-2, IL-6, and 2 other markers were in good agreement with FLISA (>0.9R2) | ( |
| Surface-enhanced Raman scattering based immunoassay | Healthy volunteer blood samples | IL-6, IL-8, and IL-18 | High sensitivity | LOD: IL-6, 3.8 pg/ml; IL-8, 7.5 pg/ml; and IL-18, 5.2 pg/ml | ( |
| Electrochemiluminescence-based system | Serum samples | CRP | High sensitivity, good selectivity, good reproducibility, and low cost | Range: 0.05–6.25 ng | ( |
| Microfluidic immunoassay with streptavidin–biotin–peroxidase nanocomplex | Unspecified patient serum samples | IL-6 (multiplexed with procalcitonin) | High sensitivity | Detection range, 5–1,280 pg/ml; LOD, 1.0 pg/ml | ( |
| Combined electrochemiluminescent and electrochemical immunoassay | Serum samples | IL-6 | Broad dynamic range, high sensitivity, and selectivity | Detection range, 10 ag/ml−90 ng/ml | ( |
COMP, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein; IL-1β, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 18, interleukin 1β, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 18; LOD, limit of detection; SENSIA, silver-enhanced sandwich immunoassay; MMP-9, matrix metalloproteinase 9; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; FLISA, fluorescence-linked immunosorbent assay; CRP, C-reactive protein.
Biosensors for detection of biochemical markers relevant to OA.
| Quartz crystal microbalance biosensor | Urine of OA patients and healthy controls | COMP | Reaction time advantage, high sensitivity | Detection range: 1–200 ng/ml | ( |
| Nanoparticle amplified SPRi aptasensor | Human serum | CRP | High sensitivity | LOD: 5 fg/ml | ( |
| Quartz crystal microbalance biosensor | MMP-1 controls | MMP-1 | Reaction time advantage | Detection range: 2–2,000 nM | ( |
| Fiber optic-particle plasmon resonance biosensor integrated with microfluidic chip | OA patient SF | MMP-3 | Cost-effectiveness, portability, high sensitivity | – | ( |
| Fiber-optic particle plasmon resonance biosensor | OA patient SF | TNF-α and MMP-3 | Reaction time advantage, simple usage, high sensitivity, high selectivity | LOD: TNF-α, 8.2 pg/ml; MMP-3, 8.2 pg/ml | ( |
| Fluoromicrobeads guiding chip-based system | Human SF and serum | COMP | Reaction time advantage | Detection range: 4 and 128 ng/ml | ( |
| Fluoromicrobeads guiding chip-based system | Human urine-based controls and artificial serum | uCTX-II and sCTX-II | Simultaneous detection, reaction time advantage | Linear detection range: sCTX-II, 0.1–2.0 ng/mL; uCTX-II, 200–2,800 ng/mmol | ( |
| Ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy | uCTX-II controls | CTX-II (multiplexed with glucose) | Cost effectiveness and simple manufacturing | Detection range: 1.3–10 ng/ml | ( |
| Ambient light-based optical biosensor | uCTX-II epitope controls | uCTX-II | Cost effectiveness, simple usage | LOD: 0.2 ng/ml | ( |
Analyzed in OA patient samples.
MMP-1, 3, matrix metallopeptidase 1, 3; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; sCTX-II and uCTX-II, serum/urinary C-telopeptide fragments of type II collagen; LOD, limit of detection; SENSIA, silver-enhanced sandwich immunoassay; COMP, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein; CRP, C-reactive protein.
Correlation between biochemical marker levels and MRI data.
| Case–control ( | MOAKS: Hoffa synovitis and effusion synovitis | ELISA: HA, MMP-3, Coll2–1NO2 | HA and MMP-3 were modestly associated with effusion-synovitis at baseline | ( |
| Cross-sectional ( | WORMS | ELISA: COMP, MMP-3, Coll2-1, Turbidimetric analysis: CRP | COMP correlated positively with WORMS and MMP-3. WORMS scoring data are not provided | ( |
| Case control ( | WORMS | ELISA: HA, MMP-3, COMP, Coll2-NO2, uCTX-II, PIIANP, CTXI, CS846, C2C, CPII, NTXI/uNTXI, C12C/uC12C | MRI data associated between HA, COMP, and MMP-3 biochemical markers of OA. The biochemical cartilage ECM (Coll2-NO2) degeneration reflects MRI T2 measures | ( |
| Cross-sectional ( | WORMS | ELISA: IL-8, COMP, CTXI, NTXI, PIIINP, MMP-3, MMP-10, MMP-13 | The positive association was between IL-8 and infrapatellar fat pad signal intensity | ( |
| Cross-sectional ( | WORMS | ELISA: 100A8/A9, MMP-3, MMP-10, MMP-13 | The levels of alarmins 100A8/A9 had positive associations with MRI score for total and local cartilage defects (lateral femoral, lateral tibial, and medial femoral sites) | ( |
| Osteoarthritis Initiative Progression subcohort ( | MRI quantitative cartilage volume measurement | ELISA: adiponectin | The ratio of adipsin/MCP-1 was associated with the MRI knee structural changes, and CRP/MCP-1 with symptoms in obese OA subjects | ( |
| Cross-sectional ( | MRI semiautomatic segmentation method | ELISA: COMP, C1,2C, CS846 | Long-term mechanical stimuli increase the cartilage degradation markers as C1,2C and CS846. Those biochemical markers correlate with cartilage damage (MRI) | ( |
| Multicenter, double-blind, phase III clinical trial ( | WORMS | ELISA: CTX-I, COMP, PIIANP, MMP-3, C1M, C3M, C2M, CS846, CTX-II, uCTX-II/creatinine ratio | Clinical study of cell and gene therapy: no significant differences in MRI between the groups of treatment vs. placebo | ( |
| Randomized, double-blinded, sham-controlled trial ( | MOAKS: Hoffa synovitis and effusion synovitis | ESR | Low-dose radiation therapy does not induce significant effects on inflammatory signs assessed by MRI, ultrasound and serum inflammatory markers | ( |
s100A8/A9, myeloid related protein 8/14, calprotectin; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; COMP, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein; Coll2-1, type II collagen degradation biomarker 1; Coll2–1NO2, nitrated epitope of the α-helical region of type II collagen; C12C/uC12C, collagen type I and II cleavage product and its urine form; C2C, type II collagen degradation biomarker, generated from C-terminus fragment; C1M, C2M, C3M, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) mediated type I, II, III collagen degradation biomarker; CPII, C-propeptide of type II procollagen; CRP, C-reactive protein; CTX-I, serum C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen; CS846, chondroitin sulfate synthesis marker; sCTX-II and uCTX-II, serum/urinary C-telopeptide fragments of type II collagen; HA, hyaluronic acid; IL-8, interleukin 8; MMP-3, 10, 13, matrix metalloproteinase 3, 10, 13; MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; MOAKS, MRI OA Knee Score; NTXI/uNTXI, crosslinked N-telopeptide of type I collagen and its urine form; PIIANP, serum N-propeptide of collagen IIA; PIIINP, N-terminal procollagen III propeptide; WORMS, whole organ magnetic resonance imaging score.