Application of Nylon Affinity Nets to Capture Tuberculosis Extracellular Vesicles and Identify Protein Biomarkers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13021/jssr2023.3928Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) requires efforts for more efficient diagnostic approaches to combat its impact worldwide. Current diagnostic efforts only identify active disease rather than infection stage and are limited to blood or skin samples, which are difficult to obtain from younger or immunocompromised patients. A promising source for TB diagnosis is the extracellular vesicles (EVs) released by TB bacteria, containing valuable TB biomarkers in many easily accessible biological samples. They provide an accurate distinction between latent TB and TB disease, and thus, can be more informative if captured properly. This study develops a novel method to utilize nylon affinity nets to properly capture EVs from patient urine samples. We used nylon fibers functionalized with synthetic dyes (affinity net) for the capture and concentration of EVs from urine. EVs are examined for protein and DNA content by LC-MS/MS and by identifying the TB genes within EVs using molecular biology techniques (DNA precipitation - ligation mediated amplification, cloning sequencing, and nucleotide blast). Functionalized nylon captured urine EVs contain MTB peptides and nucleic acids, such as LAM, CD81, CD63, CD9, and the rpoB gene (identified by PCR). Identification of various proteins and markers in TB urine could help in sputum-free diagnosis and antibody development.
Published
Issue
Section
Categories
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.