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Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection

Female genital tract secretions are commonly sampled by lavage of the ectocervix and vaginal vault or via a sponge inserted into the endocervix for evaluating inflammation status and immune factors critical for HIV microbicide and vaccine studies. This study uses a proteomics approach to comprehensi...

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Autores principales: Birse, Kenzie M., Burgener, Adam, Westmacott, Garrett R., McCorrister, Stuart, Novak, Richard M., Ball, T. Blake
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3828359/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24244515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079505
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author Birse, Kenzie M.
Burgener, Adam
Westmacott, Garrett R.
McCorrister, Stuart
Novak, Richard M.
Ball, T. Blake
author_facet Birse, Kenzie M.
Burgener, Adam
Westmacott, Garrett R.
McCorrister, Stuart
Novak, Richard M.
Ball, T. Blake
author_sort Birse, Kenzie M.
collection PubMed
description Female genital tract secretions are commonly sampled by lavage of the ectocervix and vaginal vault or via a sponge inserted into the endocervix for evaluating inflammation status and immune factors critical for HIV microbicide and vaccine studies. This study uses a proteomics approach to comprehensively compare the efficacy of these methods, which sample from different compartments of the female genital tract, for the collection of immune factors. Matching sponge and lavage samples were collected from 10 healthy women and were analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry. Data was analyzed by a combination of differential protein expression analysis, hierarchical clustering and pathway analysis. Of the 385 proteins identified, endocervical sponge samples collected nearly twice as many unique proteins as cervicovaginal lavage (111 vs. 61) with 55% of proteins common to both (213). Each method/site identified 73 unique proteins that have roles in host immunity according to their gene ontology. Sponge samples enriched for specific inflammation pathways including acute phase response proteins (p = 3.37×10(−24)) and LXR/RXR immune activation pathways (p = 8.82×10(−22)) while the role IL-17A in psoriasis pathway (p = 5.98×10(−4)) and the complement system pathway (p = 3.91×10(−3)) were enriched in lavage samples. Many host defense factors were differentially enriched (p<0.05) between sites including known/potential antimicrobial factors (n = 21), S100 proteins (n = 9), and immune regulatory factors such as serpins (n = 7). Immunoglobulins (n = 6) were collected at comparable levels in abundance in each site although 25% of those identified were unique to sponge samples. This study demonstrates significant differences in types and quantities of immune factors and inflammation pathways collected by each sampling technique. Therefore, clinical studies that measure mucosal immune activation or factors assessing HIV transmission should utilize both collection methods to obtain the greatest representation of immune factors secreted into the female genital tract.
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spelling pubmed-38283592013-11-16 Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection Birse, Kenzie M. Burgener, Adam Westmacott, Garrett R. McCorrister, Stuart Novak, Richard M. Ball, T. Blake PLoS One Research Article Female genital tract secretions are commonly sampled by lavage of the ectocervix and vaginal vault or via a sponge inserted into the endocervix for evaluating inflammation status and immune factors critical for HIV microbicide and vaccine studies. This study uses a proteomics approach to comprehensively compare the efficacy of these methods, which sample from different compartments of the female genital tract, for the collection of immune factors. Matching sponge and lavage samples were collected from 10 healthy women and were analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry. Data was analyzed by a combination of differential protein expression analysis, hierarchical clustering and pathway analysis. Of the 385 proteins identified, endocervical sponge samples collected nearly twice as many unique proteins as cervicovaginal lavage (111 vs. 61) with 55% of proteins common to both (213). Each method/site identified 73 unique proteins that have roles in host immunity according to their gene ontology. Sponge samples enriched for specific inflammation pathways including acute phase response proteins (p = 3.37×10(−24)) and LXR/RXR immune activation pathways (p = 8.82×10(−22)) while the role IL-17A in psoriasis pathway (p = 5.98×10(−4)) and the complement system pathway (p = 3.91×10(−3)) were enriched in lavage samples. Many host defense factors were differentially enriched (p<0.05) between sites including known/potential antimicrobial factors (n = 21), S100 proteins (n = 9), and immune regulatory factors such as serpins (n = 7). Immunoglobulins (n = 6) were collected at comparable levels in abundance in each site although 25% of those identified were unique to sponge samples. This study demonstrates significant differences in types and quantities of immune factors and inflammation pathways collected by each sampling technique. Therefore, clinical studies that measure mucosal immune activation or factors assessing HIV transmission should utilize both collection methods to obtain the greatest representation of immune factors secreted into the female genital tract. Public Library of Science 2013-11-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3828359/ /pubmed/24244515 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079505 Text en © 2013 Birse et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Birse, Kenzie M.
Burgener, Adam
Westmacott, Garrett R.
McCorrister, Stuart
Novak, Richard M.
Ball, T. Blake
Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection
title Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection
title_full Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection
title_fullStr Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection
title_full_unstemmed Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection
title_short Unbiased Proteomics Analysis Demonstrates Significant Variability in Mucosal Immune Factor Expression Depending on the Site and Method of Collection
title_sort unbiased proteomics analysis demonstrates significant variability in mucosal immune factor expression depending on the site and method of collection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3828359/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24244515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079505
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