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The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity

BACKGROUND: Central nervous system (CNS) infection is a nearly universal feature of untreated systemic HIV infection with a clinical spectrum that ranges from chronic asymptomatic infection to severe cognitive and motor dysfunction. Analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has played an important part...

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Autores principales: Angel, Thomas E, Jacobs, Jon M, Spudich, Serena S, Gritsenko, Marina A, Fuchs, Dietmar, Liegler, Teri, Zetterberg, Henrik, Camp, David G, Price, Richard W, Smith, Richard D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3353874/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22433316
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1559-0275-9-3
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author Angel, Thomas E
Jacobs, Jon M
Spudich, Serena S
Gritsenko, Marina A
Fuchs, Dietmar
Liegler, Teri
Zetterberg, Henrik
Camp, David G
Price, Richard W
Smith, Richard D
author_facet Angel, Thomas E
Jacobs, Jon M
Spudich, Serena S
Gritsenko, Marina A
Fuchs, Dietmar
Liegler, Teri
Zetterberg, Henrik
Camp, David G
Price, Richard W
Smith, Richard D
author_sort Angel, Thomas E
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Central nervous system (CNS) infection is a nearly universal feature of untreated systemic HIV infection with a clinical spectrum that ranges from chronic asymptomatic infection to severe cognitive and motor dysfunction. Analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has played an important part in defining the character of this evolving infection and response to treatment. To further characterize CNS HIV infection and its effects, we applied advanced high-throughput proteomic methods to CSF to identify novel proteins and their changes with disease progression and treatment. RESULTS: After establishing an accurate mass and time (AMT) tag database containing 23,141 AMT tags for CSF peptides, we analyzed 91 CSF samples by LC-MS from 12 HIV-uninfected and 14 HIV-infected subjects studied in the context of initiation of antiretroviral therapy and correlated abundances of identified proteins a) within and between subjects, b) with all other proteins across the entire sample set, and c) with "external" CSF biomarkers of infection (HIV RNA), immune activation (neopterin) and neural injury (neurofilament light chain protein, NFL). We identified a mean of 2,333 +/- 328 (SD) peptides covering 307 +/-16 proteins in the 91 CSF sample set. Protein abundances differed both between and within subjects sampled at different time points and readily separated those with and without HIV infection. Proteins also showed inter-correlations across the sample set that were associated with biologically relevant dynamic processes. One-hundred and fifty proteins showed correlations with the external biomarkers. For example, using a threshold of cross correlation coefficient (Pearson's) ≤ -0.3 and ≥0.3 for potentially meaningful relationships, a total of 99 proteins correlated with CSF neopterin (43 negative and 56 positive correlations) and related principally to neuronal plasticity and survival and to innate immunity. Pathway analysis defined several networks connecting the identified proteins, including one with amyloid precursor protein as a central node. CONCLUSIONS: Advanced CSF proteomic analysis enabled the identification of an array of novel protein changes across the spectrum of CNS HIV infection and disease. This initial analysis clearly demonstrated the value of contemporary state-of-the-art proteomic CSF analysis as a discovery tool in HIV infection with likely similar application to other neurological inflammatory and degenerative diseases.
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spelling pubmed-33538742012-05-17 The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity Angel, Thomas E Jacobs, Jon M Spudich, Serena S Gritsenko, Marina A Fuchs, Dietmar Liegler, Teri Zetterberg, Henrik Camp, David G Price, Richard W Smith, Richard D Clin Proteomics Research BACKGROUND: Central nervous system (CNS) infection is a nearly universal feature of untreated systemic HIV infection with a clinical spectrum that ranges from chronic asymptomatic infection to severe cognitive and motor dysfunction. Analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has played an important part in defining the character of this evolving infection and response to treatment. To further characterize CNS HIV infection and its effects, we applied advanced high-throughput proteomic methods to CSF to identify novel proteins and their changes with disease progression and treatment. RESULTS: After establishing an accurate mass and time (AMT) tag database containing 23,141 AMT tags for CSF peptides, we analyzed 91 CSF samples by LC-MS from 12 HIV-uninfected and 14 HIV-infected subjects studied in the context of initiation of antiretroviral therapy and correlated abundances of identified proteins a) within and between subjects, b) with all other proteins across the entire sample set, and c) with "external" CSF biomarkers of infection (HIV RNA), immune activation (neopterin) and neural injury (neurofilament light chain protein, NFL). We identified a mean of 2,333 +/- 328 (SD) peptides covering 307 +/-16 proteins in the 91 CSF sample set. Protein abundances differed both between and within subjects sampled at different time points and readily separated those with and without HIV infection. Proteins also showed inter-correlations across the sample set that were associated with biologically relevant dynamic processes. One-hundred and fifty proteins showed correlations with the external biomarkers. For example, using a threshold of cross correlation coefficient (Pearson's) ≤ -0.3 and ≥0.3 for potentially meaningful relationships, a total of 99 proteins correlated with CSF neopterin (43 negative and 56 positive correlations) and related principally to neuronal plasticity and survival and to innate immunity. Pathway analysis defined several networks connecting the identified proteins, including one with amyloid precursor protein as a central node. CONCLUSIONS: Advanced CSF proteomic analysis enabled the identification of an array of novel protein changes across the spectrum of CNS HIV infection and disease. This initial analysis clearly demonstrated the value of contemporary state-of-the-art proteomic CSF analysis as a discovery tool in HIV infection with likely similar application to other neurological inflammatory and degenerative diseases. Springer 2012-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3353874/ /pubmed/22433316 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1559-0275-9-3 Text en Copyright ©2012 Angel et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Angel, Thomas E
Jacobs, Jon M
Spudich, Serena S
Gritsenko, Marina A
Fuchs, Dietmar
Liegler, Teri
Zetterberg, Henrik
Camp, David G
Price, Richard W
Smith, Richard D
The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity
title The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity
title_full The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity
title_fullStr The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity
title_full_unstemmed The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity
title_short The cerebrospinal fluid proteome in HIV infection: change associated with disease severity
title_sort cerebrospinal fluid proteome in hiv infection: change associated with disease severity
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3353874/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22433316
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1559-0275-9-3
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