4.7 Article

Measurement of Organ-Specific and Acute-Phase Blood Protein Levels in Early Lyme Disease

期刊

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
卷 19, 期 1, 页码 346-359

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.9b00569

关键词

Lyme disease; organ-specific protein; acute phase protein; proteomics; selective reaction monitoring; SRM; tick-borne disease

资金

  1. Bay Area Lyme Foundation
  2. Steven and Alexandra Cohen Foundation
  3. NIH [P30AR05350, P50GM076547, P30ES017885, U24CA210967]
  4. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R21AI133335]
  5. Wilke Family Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lyme disease results from infection of humans with the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi. The first and most common clinical manifestation is the circular, inflamed skin lesion referred to as erythema migrans; later manifestations result from infections of other body sites. Laboratory diagnosis of Lyme disease can be challenging in patients with erythema migrans because of the time delay in the development of specific diagnostic antibodies against Borrelia. Reliable blood biomarkers for the early diagnosis of Lyme disease in patients with erythema migrans are needed. Here, we performed selected reaction monitoring, a targeted mass spectrometry-based approach, to measure selected proteins that (1) are known to be predominantly expressed in one organ (i.e., organ-specific blood proteins) and whose blood concentrations may change as a result of Lyme disease, or (2) are involved in acute immune responses. In a longitudinal cohort of 40 Lyme disease patients and 20 healthy controls, we identified 10 proteins with significantly altered serum levels in patients at the time of diagnosis, and we also developed a 10-protein panel identified through multivariate analysis. In an independent cohort of patients with erythema migrans, six of these proteins, APOA4, C9, CRP, CST6, PGLYRP2, and S100A9, were confirmed to show significantly altered serum levels in patients at time of presentation. Nine of the 10 proteins from the multivariate panel were also verified in the second cohort. These proteins, primarily innate immune response proteins or proteins specific to liver, skin, or white blood cells, may serve as candidate blood biomarkers requiring further validation to aid in the laboratory diagnosis of early Lyme disease.

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