1. Detection of toxoplasmic encephalitis in HIV positive patients in urine with hydrogel nanoparticles
- Author
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Robert H. Gilman, Cusi Ferradas, Alessandra Luchini, Lance A. Liotta, Monica M. Diaz, Andrea Diestra, Maritza Calderon, Bolivia, Paul Russo, Viviana Pinedo-Cancino, Deanna Zhu, Cesar Ramal Asayag, Natalie M. Bowman, Vern B. Carruthers, Daniel E. Clark, Edith Málaga, Ruben Magni, and Hannah Steinberg
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Physiology ,RC955-962 ,HIV Infections ,Urine ,Nervous System ,Serology ,Toxoplasma Gondii ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Nanotechnology ,Viral load ,Materials ,Cerebrospinal Fluid ,Protozoans ,biology ,Eukaryota ,Hydrogels ,Middle Aged ,Body Fluids ,Infectious Diseases ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Blood ,Specimen collection ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering and Technology ,Encephalitis ,Female ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,medicine.symptom ,Anatomy ,Toxoplasma ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.06 [https] ,Toxoplasmosis ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.drug_class ,Amorphous Solids ,030231 tropical medicine ,Materials Science ,Toxoplasma gondii ,Antigens, Protozoan ,Monoclonal antibody ,Asymptomatic ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antigen ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Parasite Groups ,Humans ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular diagnostics ,Virology ,Parasitic Protozoans ,030104 developmental biology ,Mixtures ,Immunology ,Nanoparticles ,Tachyzoites ,Parasitology ,business ,Apicomplexa ,Gels - Abstract
Background Diagnosis of toxoplasmic encephalitis (TE) is challenging under the best clinical circumstances. The poor clinical sensitivity of quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) for Toxoplasma in blood and CSF and the limited availability of molecular diagnostics and imaging technology leaves clinicians in resource-limited settings with few options other than empiric treatment. Methology/principle findings Here we describe proof of concept for a novel urine diagnostics for TE using Poly-N-Isopropylacrylamide nanoparticles dyed with Reactive Blue-221 to concentrate antigens, substantially increasing the limit of detection. After nanoparticle-concentration, a standard western blotting technique with a monoclonal antibody was used for antigen detection. Limit of detection was 7.8pg/ml and 31.3pg/ml of T. gondii antigens GRA1 and SAG1, respectively. To characterize this diagnostic approach, 164 hospitalized HIV-infected patients with neurological symptoms compatible with TE were tested for 1) T. gondii serology (121/147, positive samples/total samples tested), 2) qPCR in cerebrospinal fluid (11/41), 3) qPCR in blood (10/112), and 4) urinary GRA1 (30/164) and SAG1 (12/164). GRA1 appears to be superior to SAG1 for detection of TE antigens in urine. Fifty-one HIV-infected, T. gondii seropositive but asymptomatic persons all tested negative by nanoparticle western blot and blood qPCR, suggesting the test has good specificity for TE for both GRA1 and SAG1. In a subgroup of 44 patients, urine samples were assayed with mass spectrometry parallel-reaction-monitoring (PRM) for the presence of T. gondii antigens. PRM identified antigens in 8 samples, 6 of which were concordant with the urine diagnostic. Conclusion/significances Our results demonstrate nanoparticle technology’s potential for a noninvasive diagnostic test for TE. Moving forward, GRA1 is a promising target for antigen based diagnostics for TE., Author summary Toxoplasmic Encephalitis is a debilitating, yet highly treatable illness, classically seen in person living with HIV lacking treatment. Prompt diagnosis ensures the best outcome possible for patients, but remains a challenge: requiring invasive specimen collection, lacking necessary clinical sensitivity, demanding significant technical skills, and substantial infrastructure. Here we offer proof of concept of a diagnostic approach that is minimally invasive, using a urine-based approach that concentrates T. gondii antigens with hydrogel mesh nanoparticles to improve analytical sensitivity for detection by western blot.
- Published
- 2021