[HTML][HTML] Urine peptidomic and targeted plasma protein analyses in the diagnosis and monitoring of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

XB Ling, K Lau, C Deshpande, JL Park, D Milojevic… - Clinical proteomics, 2010 - Springer
XB Ling, K Lau, C Deshpande, JL Park, D Milojevic, C Macaubas, C Xiao, V Lopez-Avila
Clinical proteomics, 2010Springer
Purpose Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis is a chronic pediatric disease. The initial
clinical presentation can mimic other pediatric inflammatory conditions, which often leads to
significant delays in diagnosis and appropriate therapy. SJIA biomarker development is an
unmet diagnostic/prognostic need to prevent disease complications. Experimental Design
We profiled the urine peptidome to analyze a set of 102 urine samples, from patients with
SJIA, Kawasaki disease (KD), febrile illnesses (FI), and healthy controls. A set of 91 plasma …
Purpose
Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis is a chronic pediatric disease. The initial clinical presentation can mimic other pediatric inflammatory conditions, which often leads to significant delays in diagnosis and appropriate therapy. SJIA biomarker development is an unmet diagnostic/prognostic need to prevent disease complications.
Experimental Design
We profiled the urine peptidome to analyze a set of 102 urine samples, from patients with SJIA, Kawasaki disease (KD), febrile illnesses (FI), and healthy controls. A set of 91 plasma samples, from SJIA flare and quiescent patients, were profiled using a customized antibody array against 43 proteins known to be involved in inflammatory and protein catabolic processes.
Results
We identified a 17-urine-peptide biomarker panel that could effectively discriminate SJIA patients at active, quiescent, and remission disease states, and patients with active SJIA from confounding conditions including KD and FI. Targeted sequencing of these peptides revealed that they fall into several tight clusters from seven different proteins, suggesting disease-specific proteolytic activities. The antibody array plasma profiling identified an SJIA plasma flare signature consisting of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP1), interleukin (IL)-18, regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES), P-Selectin, MMP9, and L-Selectin.
Conclusions and Clinical Relevance
The urine peptidomic and plasma protein analyses have the potential to improve SJIA care and suggest that SJIA urine peptide biomarkers may be an outcome of inflammation-driven effects on catabolic pathways operating at multiple sites.
Springer