Multiplex Assay for Quantification of Acute Phase Proteins and Immunoglobulin A in Dried Blood Spots
Language English Country United States Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Keywords
- acute phase proteins, dried blood spots, immune response, inflammation markers, selected reaction monitoring, targeted quantitative proteomics,
- MeSH
- Biomarkers blood MeSH
- Biological Assay methods MeSH
- Immunity MeSH
- Immunoglobulin A blood MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Acute-Phase Proteins analysis MeSH
- Proteomics methods MeSH
- Dried Blood Spot Testing methods MeSH
- Inflammation etiology MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Biomarkers MeSH
- Immunoglobulin A MeSH
- Acute-Phase Proteins MeSH
Inflammation is the first line defense mechanism against infection, tissue damage, or cancer development. However, inappropriate inflammatory response may also trigger diseases. The quantification of inflammatory proteins is essential to distinguish between harmful and beneficial immune response. Currently used immunoanalytical assays may suffer specificity issues due to antigen-antibody interaction and possible cross-reactivity of antibody with other protein species. In addition, immunoanalytical assays typically require invasive blood sampling and additional logistics; they are relatively costly and highly challenging to multiplex. We present a multiplex assay based on selected reaction monitoring (SRM) for quantification of seven acute-phase proteins (i.e., SAA1, SAA2-isoform1, SAA4, CRP, A1AT-isoform1, A1AG1, A1AG2) and the adaptive immunity effector IGHA1 in dried blood spots. This type of sample is readily available from all human subjects including newborns. The study utilizes proteotypic isotopically labeled peptides with trypsin-cleavable tag and presents optimized and reproducible workflow and several important practical remarks regarding quantitative SRM assays development. The panel of inflammatory proteins was quantified with sequence specificity capable to differentiate protein isoforms with intra- and interday precision (<16.4% coefficient of variation (CV) and <14.3% CV, respectively). Quantitative results were correlated with immuno-nephelometric assay (typically greater than 0.9 Pearson's R).
Department of Clinical Hematology University Hospital Brno Brno Czech Republic
Research Centre for Toxic Compounds in the Environment Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic
References provided by Crossref.org
Single Cerebral Organoid Mass Spectrometry of Cell-Specific Protein and Glycosphingolipid Traits