An Aptamer Linked Immobilized Sorbent Assay (ALISA) to Detect Circulatory IFN-α, an Inflammatory Protein among Tuberculosis Patients.
Vibha TanejaManish GoelUma ShankarAmit KumarGopi C KhilnaniHanumanthappa K PrasadGodavari B K S PrasadUmesh D GuptaTarun Kumar SharmaPublished in: ACS combinatorial science (2020)
Dysregulation of IFN-α is the basis for pathogenesis of autoimmune as well as infectious diseases. Identifying inflammatory signatures in peripheral blood of patients is an approach for monitoring active infection. Hence, estimation of type I IFNs as an inflammatory biomarker to scrutinize disease status after treatment is useful. Accordingly, an Aptamer Linked Immobilized Sorbent Assay (ALISA) for the detection of IFN-α in serum samples was developed. Sixteen aptamers were screened for their ability to bind IFN-α. Aptamer IFNα-3 exhibited specificity for IFN-α with no cross-reactivity with interferons β and γ and human serum albumin. The disassociation constant (Kd) was determined to be 3.96 ± 0.36 nM, and the limit of detection was ∼2 ng. The characterized IFNα-3 aptamer was used in ALISA to screen tuberculosis (TB) patients' sera. An elevated IFN-α level in sera derived from untreated TB patients (median = 0.31), compared to nontuberculous household contacts (median = 0.13) and healthy volunteers (median = 0.12), and further a decline in IFN-α level among treated patients (median = 0.13) were seen. The ALISA assay facilitates direct estimation of inflammatory protein(s) in circulation unlike mRNA estimation by real time PCR. Designing of aptamers similar to the IFNα-3 aptamer provides a novel approach to assess other inflammatory protein(s) in patients before, during, and after completion of treatment and would denote clinical improvement in successfully treated patients.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- immune response
- dendritic cells
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- gold nanoparticles
- high throughput
- emergency department
- high resolution
- patient reported outcomes
- mass spectrometry
- genome wide
- patient reported
- label free
- molecularly imprinted
- human serum albumin