4.5 Article

A proteomic analysis of urine biomarkers in autism spectrum disorder

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS
Volume 242, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jprot.2021.104259

Keywords

Autism spectrum disorder; Proteomics; Parallel reaction monitoring; Biomarkers

Funding

  1. Beijing Children's Hospital Young Investigator Program Fund [BCHYIPB201601]

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This study analyzed and validated potential urinary biomarkers for ASD using mass spectrometry proteomics. A total of 34 significantly changed proteins were found in the discovery set, and seven proteins were identified as potential biomarkers for ASD through PRM assays. The results lay the groundwork for additional research on using biomarkers for the clinical diagnosis of ASD.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by early-onset socialcommunication challenges, restricted and repetitive behaviors, or unusual sensory-motor behaviors. A lack of specific biomarkers hinders the early diagnosis and treatment of this disease in many children. This study analyzes and validates potential urinary biomarkers using mass spectrometry proteomics. Global proteomics profiles of urine from 19 ASD patients and 19 healthy control subjects were compared to identify significantly changed proteins. These proteins were validated with targeted proteomics using parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) in an independent validation set consisting of samples from 40 ASD patients and 38 healthy controls. A total of 34 significantly changed proteins were found in the discovery set, among which seven proteins were identified as potential biomarkers for ASD through PRM assays in the validation set. Of these seven proteins, immunoglobulin kappa variable 4-1, immunoglobulin kappa variable 3-20, and immunoglobulin lambda variable 1-51 were up-regulated, while ATP synthase F1 subunit alpha, 10 kDa heat shock protein, apolipoprotein CIII, and arylsulfatase F were down-regulated. Six of these seven proteins support previous findings that ASD is accompanied by altered immune response and lipid metabolism, as well as mitochondrial dysfunction. This study lays the groundwork for additional research using biomarkers to clinically diagnose ASD. The proteomics and PRM raw data of this study have been deposited under the accession number IPX0002592000 at iProX. Significance: This study identified 34 proteins in urine of ASD patients that were significantly changed from the urinary proteins of healthy subjects using LC-MS/MS-based proteomics in a discovery set. Seven of these proteins were validated by PRM analysis in an independent validation set. This report represents the first description of combined label-free quantitative proteomics and PRM analysis of targeted proteins for discovery of ASD urinary biomarkers. The results will be helpful for early diagnosis and can provide additional insight into the molecular mechanisms of ASD.

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