A Solid-State Nanopore Biosensor for Rapid Detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Antigens in Pediatric Blood Samples

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K22 · $106,001 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract Tuberculosis (TB) is a global health threat, but can be difficult to diagnose and manage in pediatric patients due to the weak performance and non-quantitative nature of frontline diagnostic assays, which function even worse when used with patients co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). There is an unmet need for a rapid, non-sputum-based quantitative test to detect active TB cases and anti-TB treatment responses in clinically diverse pediatric populations. The proposed research will overcome these obstacles by developing a solid-state nanopore biosensor assay that can rapidly diagnose pediatric TB by measuring Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-secreted antigens in patient serum samples. My solid-state nanopore system is easy to operate, has low fabrication/instrument costs, and can perform high-throughput and ultra-sensitive measurements on specific Mtb-derived peptides. The robust portability of this platform also allows its use in resource-limited areas that are subject to high TB prevalence. We identified two highly Mtb-specific peptide fragments of the Mtb virulence antigens CFP-10 and ESAT-6, and validated their clinical performance as biomarkers for active TB disease diagnosis using a mass spectrometry-based assay with 201 adult and 123 pediatric patients and controls chosen from highly relevant cohorts (e.g. HIV-positive/negative, pulmonary/extrapulmonary, Mtb culture-positive/negative, latent TB, and nontuberculous mycobacteria infections). Similar robust overall diagnostic sensitivities and specificities obtained using these biomarkers in adults (88.6% / 93.8%) and children (88.2% / 97.2%) significantly outperformed those reported for other frontline tests. Quantification of serum Mtb antigen concentration was also informative in monitoring the response to anti-TB treatment in HIV- positive adults. My recent results show that nanopores can accurately detect CFP-10 and/or ESAT-6 peptides in a pilot cohort of pediatric TB cases, and indicate that statistical analysis of nanopore results for peptide profiling holds significant diagnostic promise. Based on these findings, I propose that the portable solid-state nanopore biosensor to be analyzed in these studies can improve TB diagnosis in children, particularly in resource-limited areas with high TB prevalence. I will leverage this system and the robustness of Mtb antigen-derived peptide biomarkers to: (1) develop a nanopore-based TB diagnostic assay; (2) validate this assay in a pediatric cohort with and without HIV co- infection; and (3) determine whether Mtb antigens concentrations in serum decrease in response to treatment in a pilot pediatric cohort during anti-TB treatment. Given the success of these proof-of-concept studies, the long- term goal of the proposed research program is to build prototype devices for large-scale on-site clinical validation studies in high TB burden regions, and to extend this biosensing platform to the detection of other disease biomar...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9834815
Project number
5K22AI136686-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA AT COLUMBIA
Principal Investigator
Chang Liu
Activity code
K22
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$106,001
Award type
5
Project period
2018-12-10 → 2020-11-30