Longitudinal analysis of host protein serum signatures of treatment and recovery in pulmonary tuberculosis
Samantha M. Powell, Leah G. Jarsberg, Erin L. M. Zionce, Lindsey N. Anderson, Marina A. Gritsenko, Payam Nahid, Jon M. Jacobs

TL;DR
This study tracks changes in blood proteins over time in TB patients to understand treatment effects and recovery.
Contribution
The study provides a longitudinal proteomic analysis of TB treatment and recovery, identifying new protein markers across multiple timepoints.
Findings
676 serum proteins showed differential expression across treatment and recovery timepoints in TB patients.
The largest number of proteome changes occurred at the end of treatment (17 and 26 weeks).
Proteins related to IGF and Integrin signaling maintained a severity signature through 52 weeks post-treatment.
Abstract
A better understanding of treatment progression and recovery in pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) infectious disease is crucial. This study analyzed longitudinal serum samples from pulmonary TB patients undergoing interventional treatment to identify surrogate markers for TB-related outcomes. Serum that was collected at baseline and 8, 17, 26, and 52 weeks from 30 TB patients experiencing durable cure were evaluated and compared using a sensitive LC-MS/MS proteomic platform for the detection and quantification of differential host protein signatures relative to timepoint. The global proteome signature was analyzed for statistical differences across the time course and between disease severity and treatment groups. A total of 676 proteins showed differential expression in the serum over these timepoints relative to baseline. Comparisons to understand serum protein dynamics at 8 weeks,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBiochemical and Molecular Research · Advanced Proteomics Techniques and Applications · Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology
