Cost-Effective Whole Transcriptome Sequencing Landscape and Diagnostic Potential Biomarkers in Active Tuberculosis.
Zaiqiao SunBoxiao HeZhifeng YangYi HuangZhaoyu DuanChengyi YuZhaokui DanChonil PaekPeng ChenJin ZhouJun LeiFeng WangBing LiuLei YinPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2024)
Tuberculosis (TB) is a prevalent and severe infectious disease that poses a significant threat to human health. However, it is frequently disregarded as there are not enough quick and accurate ways to diagnose tuberculosis. Here, we develop a strategy for tuberculosis detection to address the challenges, including an experimental strategy, namely, Double Adapter Directional Capture sequencing (DADCSeq), an easily operated and low-cost whole transcriptome sequencing method, and a computational method to identify hub differentially expressed genes as well as the diagnosis of TB based on whole transcriptome data using DADCSeq on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from active TB and latent TB or healthy control. Applying our approach to create a robust and stable TB multi-mRNA risk probability model (TBMMRP) that can accurately distinguish active and latent TB patients, including active TB and healthy controls in clinical cohorts, this diagnostic biomarker was successfully validated by several independent cross-platform cohorts with favorable performance in differentiating active TB from latent TB or active TB from healthy controls and further demonstrated superior or similar diagnostic accuracy compared to previous diagnostic markers. Overall, we develop a low-cost and effective strategy for tuberculosis diagnosis; as the clinical cohort increases, we can expand to different disease kinds and learn new features through our disease diagnosis strategy.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- low cost
- single cell
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- human health
- rna seq
- gene expression
- newly diagnosed
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- risk assessment
- emergency department
- hiv aids
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- climate change
- magnetic resonance
- adverse drug
- infectious diseases
- binding protein
- drug induced
- prognostic factors
- hiv infected
- contrast enhanced
- bioinformatics analysis