Data from: An immunosignature test distinguishes Trypanosoma cruzi, hepatitis B, hepatitis C and West Nile Virus seropositivity among asymptomatic blood donors
Background: The complexity of the eukaryotic parasite Trypanosoma (T.) cruzi manifests in its highly dynamic genome, multi-host life cycle, progressive morphologies and immune-evasion mechanisms. Accurate determination of infection or Chagas’ disease activity and prognosis continues to challenge res...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: The complexity of the eukaryotic parasite Trypanosoma (T.)
cruzi manifests in its highly dynamic genome, multi-host life cycle,
progressive morphologies and immune-evasion mechanisms. Accurate
determination of infection or Chagas’ disease activity and prognosis
continues to challenge researchers. We hypothesized that a diagnostic
platform with higher ligand complexity than previously employed may hold
value. Methodology: We applied the ImmunoSignature Technology (IST) for
the detection of T. cruzi-specific antibodies among healthy blood donors.
IST is based on capturing the information in an individual’s antibody
repertoire by exposing their peripheral blood to a library of
>100,000 position-addressable, chemically-diverse peptides.
Principal findings: Initially, samples from two Chagas cohorts declared
positive or negative by bank testing were studied. With the first cohort,
library-peptides displaying differential binding signals between T. cruzi
sero-states were used to train an algorithm. A classifier was fixed and
tested against the training-independent second cohort to determine assay
performance. Next, samples from a mixed cohort of donors declared positive
for Chagas, hepatitis B, hepatitis C or West Nile virus were assayed on
the same library. Signals were used to train a single algorithm that
distinguished all four disease states. As a binary test, the accuracy of
predicting T. cruzi seropositivity by IST was similar, perhaps modestly
reduced, relative to conventional ELISAs. However, the results indicate
that information beyond determination of seropositivity may have been
captured. These include the identification of cohort subclasses, the
simultaneous detection and discerning of other diseases, and the discovery
of putative new antigens. Conclusions & significance: The central
outcome of this study established IST as a reliable approach for specific
determination of T. cruzi seropositivity versus disease-free individuals
or those with other diseases. Its potential contribution for monitoring
and controlling Chagas lies in IST’s delivery of higher resolution
immune-state readouts than obtained with currently-used technologies.
Despite the complexity of the ligand presentation and large quantitative
readouts, performing an IST test is simple, scalable and reproducible. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.p6882 |