Potential relevance of salivary legumain for the clinical diagnostic of hand, foot, and mouth disease.
Yong Wah TanFiona Mei Shan TeoSiok Ghee LerAsfa Alli-ShaikNyo MinChia Yin ChongNatalie Woon Hui TanRobert Y-L WangJayantha GunaratneJustin Jang Hann ChuPublished in: Journal of medical virology (2023)
The fight against hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) remains an arduous challenge without existing point-of-care (POC) diagnostic platforms for accurate diagnosis and prompt case quarantine. Hence, the purpose of this salivary biomarker discovery study is to set the fundamentals for the realization of POC diagnostics for HFMD. Whole salivary proteome profiling was performed on the saliva obtained from children with HFMD and healthy children, using a reductive dimethylation chemical labeling method coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry-based quantitative proteomics technology. We identified 19 upregulated (fold change = 1.5-5.8) and 51 downregulated proteins (fold change = 0.1-0.6) in the saliva samples of HFMD patients in comparison to that of healthy volunteers. Four upregulated protein candidates were selected for dot blot-based validation assay, based on novelty as biomarkers and exclusions in oral diseases and cancers. Salivary legumain was validated in the Singapore (n = 43 healthy, 28 HFMD cases) and Taiwan (n = 60 healthy, 47 HFMD cases) cohorts with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.7583 and 0.8028, respectively. This study demonstrates the feasibility of a broad-spectrum HFMD POC diagnostic test based on legumain, a virus-specific host systemic signature, in saliva.
Keyphrases
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- young adults
- liquid chromatography
- mass spectrometry
- high throughput
- high resolution
- ejection fraction
- small molecule
- chronic kidney disease
- risk assessment
- climate change
- ms ms
- binding protein
- peritoneal dialysis
- gas chromatography
- drug induced
- tandem mass spectrometry
- childhood cancer