Publication | Open Access
Validation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv1681 Protein as a Diagnostic Marker of Active Pulmonary Tuberculosis
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Citations
14
References
2013
Year
EngineeringHealthy SubjectsTuberculosis PreventionImmunologyPathologyDiagnosticsActive Pulmonary TuberculosisM. TuberculosisSerologic TestingTuberculosis DiagnosticsLaboratory MedicineMolecular DiagnosticsProteomicsPulmonary TuberculosisDiagnostic MarkerTuberculosisAntibody ScreeningClinical MicrobiologyActive TbPathogenesisInfectious Respiratory DiseaseMicrobiologyMedicineDiagnostic Microbiology
The development of an accurate antigen detection assay for the diagnosis of active tuberculosis (TB) would represent a major clinical advance. Here, we demonstrate that the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv1681 protein is a biomarker for active TB with potential diagnostic utility. We initially identified, by mass spectroscopy, peptides from the Rv1681 protein in urine specimens from 4 patients with untreated active TB. Rabbit IgG anti-recombinant Rv1681 detected Rv1681 protein in lysates and culture filtrates of M. tuberculosis and immunoprecipitated it from pooled urine specimens from two TB patients. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay formatted with these antibodies detected Rv1681 protein in unconcentrated urine specimens from 11/25 (44%) TB patients and 1/21 (4.8%) subjects in whom TB was initially clinically suspected but then ruled out by conventional methods. Rv1681 protein was not detected in urine specimens from 10 subjects with Escherichia coli-positive urine cultures, 26 subjects with confirmed non-TB tropical diseases (11 with schistosomiasis, 5 with Chagas' disease, and 10 with cutaneous leishmaniasis), and 14 healthy subjects. These results provide strong validation of Rv1681 protein as a promising biomarker for TB diagnosis.
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