Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever
abstract: Valley Fever (VF), is a potentially lethal fungal pneumonia caused by Coccidioides spp., which is estimated to cause ~15-30% of all community-acquired pneumonias in the highly endemic Greater Phoenix and Tucson areas of Arizona. However, an accurate antigen-based diagnostic is still lackin...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-536552019-05-16T03:01:35Z Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever abstract: Valley Fever (VF), is a potentially lethal fungal pneumonia caused by Coccidioides spp., which is estimated to cause ~15-30% of all community-acquired pneumonias in the highly endemic Greater Phoenix and Tucson areas of Arizona. However, an accurate antigen-based diagnostic is still lacking. In order to identify protein and glycan antigen biomarkers of infection, I used a combination of genomics, proteomics and glycomics analyses to provide evidence of genus-specific proteins and glycosylations. The next goal was to determine if Coccidioides-specific glycans were present in biological samples from VF patients. Urine collected from 77 humans and 63 dogs were enriched for glycans and evaluated by mass spectrometry for Coccidioides-specific glycans and evaluated against a panel of normal donor urines, urines from patients infected with other fungi, and fungal cultures from closely related pneumonia-causing fungi. A combination of 6 glycan biomarkers was 100% sensitive and 100% specific in the diagnosis of human VF subjects, while only 3 glycan biomarkers were needed for 100% sensitivity and 100 specificity in the diagnosis of dog VF subject. Additionally, a blinded trial of 23 human urine samples was correctly able to classify urine samples with 93.3% sensitivity and 100% specificity. The results of this research provides evidence that Coccidioides genus-specific glycosylations have potential as antigens in diagnostic assays. Dissertation/Thesis Mitchell, Natalie Michelle (Author) Lake, Douglas F (Advisor) Bean, Heather D (Committee member) Grys, Thomas E (Committee member) Magee, Dewey M (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Microbiology Biomarker Coccidioides Coccidioidomycosis Glycan Protein Valley Fever eng 201 pages Doctoral Dissertation Microbiology 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53655 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019 |
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language |
English |
format |
Doctoral Thesis |
sources |
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topic |
Microbiology Biomarker Coccidioides Coccidioidomycosis Glycan Protein Valley Fever |
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Microbiology Biomarker Coccidioides Coccidioidomycosis Glycan Protein Valley Fever Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever |
description |
abstract: Valley Fever (VF), is a potentially lethal fungal pneumonia caused by Coccidioides spp., which is estimated to cause ~15-30% of all community-acquired pneumonias in the highly endemic Greater Phoenix and Tucson areas of Arizona. However, an accurate antigen-based diagnostic is still lacking. In order to identify protein and glycan antigen biomarkers of infection, I used a combination of genomics, proteomics and glycomics analyses to provide evidence of genus-specific proteins and glycosylations. The next goal was to determine if Coccidioides-specific glycans were present in biological samples from VF patients. Urine collected from 77 humans and 63 dogs were enriched for glycans and evaluated by mass spectrometry for Coccidioides-specific glycans and evaluated against a panel of normal donor urines, urines from patients infected with other fungi, and fungal cultures from closely related pneumonia-causing fungi. A combination of 6 glycan biomarkers was 100% sensitive and 100% specific in the diagnosis of human VF subjects, while only 3 glycan biomarkers were needed for 100% sensitivity and 100 specificity in the diagnosis of dog VF subject. Additionally, a blinded trial of 23 human urine samples was correctly able to classify urine samples with 93.3% sensitivity and 100% specificity. The results of this research provides evidence that Coccidioides genus-specific glycosylations have potential as antigens in diagnostic assays. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Microbiology 2019 |
author2 |
Mitchell, Natalie Michelle (Author) |
author_facet |
Mitchell, Natalie Michelle (Author) |
title |
Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever |
title_short |
Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever |
title_full |
Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever |
title_fullStr |
Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever |
title_full_unstemmed |
Proteins and their Glycosylations as Diagnostic Biomarkers of Valley Fever |
title_sort |
proteins and their glycosylations as diagnostic biomarkers of valley fever |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53655 |
_version_ |
1719183431984742400 |