Evaluation of a synthetic peptide for the detection of anti-Mycobacterium tuberculosis curli pili IgG antibodies in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis.

Journal:
Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland), Volume: 109
Published:
March 3, 2018
PMID:
29559125
Authors:
Natasha Naidoo N, Balakrishna Pillay B, Martin Bubb M, Alexander Pym A, Thamsanqa Chiliza T, Kogieleum Naidoo K, Thumbi Ndung'u T, Victoria O Kasprowicz VO, Manormoney Pillay M
Abstract:

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a serious threat in underdeveloped areas. Mycobacterium tuberculosis curli pili (MTP), a virulence factor, is a potential biomarker for a reliable point of care (POC) test and was evaluated for its ability to react with Immunoglobulin G (IgG) in TB patients. An MTP synthetic peptide in a slot blot assay was used to screen serum/plasma samples (n = 65) in 3 separate cohorts, including 40 TB positive (16 HIV co-infected), 20 TB negative/HIV negative patients and 5 healthy volunteers. Forty samples were true positives (HIV positive, n = 16), 23 true negatives (HIV negative) and 2 false positives (HIV negative). The McNemar test demonstrated a 3.08% accuracy estimate (CI: -2.1% – 3.08%). This confirms that MTP is expressed during infection, including HIV-TB co-infection, is likely to be suitable for the design of a POC test and supports the validation of MTP for TB detection in larger patient populations.


Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine