Plasma Protein Profiling to Discern Indolent from Advanced Systemic Mastocytosis
Cristina Iribarren, Kerstin H. Levedahl, Ionut Atanasoai, Mattias Mattsson, Martin Höglund, Stina Söderlund, Hans Hägglund, Niclas Eriksson, Marie Carlson, Gunnar P. Nilsson

TL;DR
This study identifies plasma protein profiles that can help distinguish between different types of systemic mastocytosis, potentially improving diagnosis and understanding of the disease.
Contribution
The study introduces novel plasma protein biomarkers that differentiate between indolent and advanced systemic mastocytosis.
Findings
A principal component analysis separated patients with AdvSM from those with CM and ISM.
29 proteins, including IL-1RT1 and TNFSF13B, were associated with severe disease activity in systemic mastocytosis.
mRNA for the identified proteins was not exclusive to mast cells, suggesting other cellular origins.
Abstract
Mastocytosis is a heterogeneous disorder characterized by abnormal mast cell accumulation, in which the clinical severity may be explained by distinct molecular mechanisms. This study aimed to explore plasma protein biomarkers associated with systemic mastocytosis subtypes, as well as the cellular origin of the identified proteins. Plasma samples from patients with mastocytosis, including cutaneous mastocytosis (CM), indolent systemic mastocytosis (ISM), and advanced systemic mastocytosis (AdvSM), and a reference group of patients with polycythemia vera, were analyzed by Proximity Extension Assay technology targeting 275 proteins. Furthermore, potential cellular origin was explored using an available single-cell RNA-sequencing data set generated from patients with ISM. The study cohort included 16 patients with CM, 92 patients with systemic mastocytosis (ISM, n = 80; AdvSM, n = 12), and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMast cells and histamine · Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Research · Asthma and respiratory diseases
