MPLEx: a method for simultaneous pathogen inactivation and extraction of samples for multi-omics profiling.
Kristin E Burnum-JohnsonJennifer E KyleAmie J EisfeldCameron P CaseyKelly G StrattonJuan F GonzalezFabien HabyarimanaNicholas M NegrettiAmy C SimsSadhana ChauhanLarissa B ThackrayPeter J HalfmannKevin B WaltersYoung-Mo KimErika M ZinkCarrie D NicoraKarl K WeitzBobbie-Jo M Webb-RobertsonErnesto S NakayasuBrian AhmerMichael E KonkelVladimir MotinRalph S BaricMichael S DiamondYoshihiro KawaokaKatrina M WatersRichard D SmithThomas O MetzPublished in: The Analyst (2018)
The continued emergence and spread of infectious agents is of great concern, and systems biology approaches to infectious disease research can advance our understanding of host-pathogen relationships and facilitate the development of new therapies and vaccines. Molecular characterization of infectious samples outside of appropriate biosafety containment can take place only subsequent to pathogen inactivation. Herein, we describe a modified Folch extraction using chloroform/methanol that facilitates the molecular characterization of infectious samples by enabling simultaneous pathogen inactivation and extraction of proteins, metabolites, and lipids for subsequent mass spectrometry-based multi-omics measurements. This single-sample metabolite, protein and lipid extraction (MPLEx) method resulted in complete inactivation of clinically important bacterial and viral pathogens with exposed lipid membranes, including Yersinia pestis, Salmonella Typhimurium, and Campylobacter jejuni in pure culture, and Yersinia pestis, Campylobacter jejuni, and West Nile, MERS-CoV, Ebola, and influenza H7N9 viruses in infection studies. In addition, >99% inactivation, which increased with solvent exposure time, was also observed for pathogens without exposed lipid membranes including community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Clostridium difficile spores and vegetative cells, and adenovirus type 5. The overall pipeline of inactivation and subsequent proteomic, metabolomic, and lipidomic analyses was evaluated using a human epithelial lung cell line infected with wild-type and mutant influenza H7N9 viruses, thereby demonstrating that MPLEx yields biomaterial of sufficient quality for subsequent multi-omics analyses. Based on these experimental results, we believe that MPLEx will facilitate systems biology studies of infectious samples by enabling simultaneous pathogen inactivation and multi-omics measurements from a single specimen with high success for pathogens with exposed lipid membranes.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- candida albicans
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- antimicrobial resistance
- mass spectrometry
- sars cov
- wild type
- fatty acid
- clostridium difficile
- escherichia coli
- healthcare
- mental health
- endothelial cells
- staphylococcus aureus
- biofilm formation
- induced apoptosis
- gram negative
- cell cycle arrest
- liquid chromatography
- multidrug resistant
- listeria monocytogenes
- small molecule
- simultaneous determination
- cell death