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Zeptomole per milliliter detection and quantification of edema factor in plasma by LC-MS/MS yields insights into toxemia and the progression of inhalation anthrax.

Authors :
Lins, Renato C.
Boyer, Anne E.
Kuklenyik, Zsuzsanna
Woolfitt, Adrian R.
Goldstein, Jason
Hoffmaster, Alex R.
Gallegos-Candela, Maribel
Leysath, Clinton E.
Chen, Zhaochun
Brumlow, Judith O.
Quinn, Conrad P.
Bagarozzi Jr, Dennis A.
Leppla, Stephen H.
Barr, John R.
Source :
Analytical & Bioanalytical Chemistry. May2019, Vol. 411 Issue 12, p2493-2509. 17p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Inhalation of Bacillus anthracis spores can cause a rapidly progressing fatal infection. B. anthracis secretes three protein toxins: lethal factor (LF), edema factor (EF), and protective antigen (PA). EF and LF may circulate as free or PA-bound forms. Both free EF (EF) and PA-bound-EF (ETx) have adenylyl cyclase activity converting ATP to cAMP. We developed an adenylyl cyclase activity-based method for detecting and quantifying total EF (EF+ETx) in plasma. The three-step method includes magnetic immunocapture with monoclonal antibodies, reaction with ATP generating cAMP, and quantification of cAMP by isotope-dilution HPLC-MS/MS. Total EF was quantified from 5PL regression of cAMP vs ETx concentration. The detection limit was 20 fg/mL (225 zeptomoles/mL for the 89 kDa protein). Relative standard deviations for controls with 0.3, 6.0, and 90 pg/mL were 11.7–16.6% with 91.2–99.5% accuracy. The method demonstrated 100% specificity in 238 human serum/plasma samples collected from unexposed healthy individuals, and 100% sensitivity in samples from 3 human and 5 rhesus macaques with inhalation anthrax. Analysis of EF in the rhesus macaques showed that it was detected earlier post-exposure than B. anthracis by culture and PCR. Similar to LF, the kinetics of EF over the course of infection were triphasic, with an initial rise (phase-1), decline (phase-2), and final rapid rise (phase-3). EF levels were ~ 2–4 orders of magnitude lower than LF during phase-1 and phase-2 and only ~ 6-fold lower at death/euthanasia. Analysis of EF improves early diagnosis and adds to our understanding of anthrax toxemia throughout infection. The LF/EF ratio may also indicate the stage of infection and need for advanced treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16182642
Volume :
411
Issue :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Analytical & Bioanalytical Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135927965
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00216-019-01730-4