| Literature DB >> 34227939 |
Jun Cai1, Jitka Petrlova2, Mariena Ja van der Plas2,1, Karim Saleh2,3, Sven Kjellström4, Artur Schmidtchen2,3,5.
Abstract
The normal wound healing process is characterised by proteolytic events, whereas infection results in dysfunctional activations by endogenous and bacterial proteases. Peptides, downstream reporters of these proteolytic actions, could therefore serve as a promising tool for diagnosis of wounds. Using mass-spectrometry analyses, we here for the first time characterise the peptidome of human wound fluids. Sterile post-surgical wound fluids were found to contain a high degree of peptides in comparison to human plasma. Analyses of the peptidome from uninfected healing wounds and Staphylococcus aureus -infected wounds identify unique peptide patterns of various proteins, including coagulation and complement factors, proteases, and antiproteinases. Together, the work defines a workflow for analysis of peptides derived from wound fluids and demonstrates a proof-of-concept that such fluids can be used for analysis of qualitative differences of peptide patterns from larger patient cohorts, providing potential biomarkers for wound healing and infection.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial infection; biochemistry; biomarkers; chemical biology; human; immunology; inflammation; peptide profiles; peptidomics; plasma; wound fluid
Year: 2021 PMID: 34227939 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.66876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140