4.5 Article

A new method to evaluate macaque health using exhaled breath: A case study of M-tuberculosis in a BSL-3 setting

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 122, Issue 3, Pages 695-701

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00888.2016

Keywords

breath; tuberculosis; GCxGC-TOFMS; macaque

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL-110811, AI-114674]
  2. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

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Breath is hypothesized to contain clinically relevant information, useful for the diagnosis and monitoring of disease, as well as understanding underlying pathogenesis. Nonhuman primates, such as the cynomolgus macaque, serve as an important model for the study of human disease, including over 70 different human infections. In this feasibility study, exhaled breath was successfully collected in less than 5 min under Biosafety Level 3 conditions from five anesthetized, intubated cynomolgus and rhesus macaques, before and after lung infection with M. tuberculosis. The breath was subsequently analyzed using comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography coupled to time-offlight mass spectrometry. A total of 384 macaque breath features were detected, with hydrocarbons being the most abundant. We provide putative identification for 19 breath molecules and report on overlap between the identified macaque breath compounds and those identified in previous human studies.

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