A novel assay for improved detection of sputum periostin in patients with asthma.

PLoS One

Experimental Asthma and Allergy Research, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers developed enhanced ELISA assays to measure sputum periostin levels in asthma patients, focusing on both whole periostin and its cleavage products.
  • They found that sputum contained mostly smaller periostin fragments and that their assay could detect these fragments in 90% of samples compared to only 44% for whole periostin.
  • The study concluded that sputum periostin is a potentially valuable biomarker in asthma, correlating more strongly with clinical characteristics like lung function and inflammation than serum periostin.

Article Abstract

Background: Serum periostin associates with type-2 inflammation in asthmatic airways, but also reflects whole body periostin levels originating from multiple sources. Less is known about sputum periostin as a biomarker in asthma as detection levels are low using currently available periostin assays. We aimed to investigate detection of sputum periostin using ELISA assays targeting different periostin epitopes and relate levels to clinical characteristics.

Methods: Two ELISA systems were developed using antibodies detecting whole periostin or cleavage products, the molecular weight and amino acid sequences of which were confirmed. The ELISA assays were applied to sputum from 80 patients with mild-to-moderate and severe asthma enrolled in the European, multi-center study BIOAIR. Results were related to clinical characteristics.

Results: Sputum was found to contain smaller periostin fragments, possibly due to proteolytic cleavage at a C-terminal site. Comparing ELISA methodology using antibodies against cleaved versus whole periostin revealed detectable levels in 90% versus 44% of sputum samples respectively. Sputum periostin showed associations with blood and sputum eosinophils. Furthermore, sputum, but not serum, periostin correlated with reduced lung function and sputum IL-13 and was reduced by oral corticosteroid treatment.

Conclusions: We present an ELISA method for improved analysis of sputum periostin by detecting cleavage products of the periostin protein. Using this assay, sputum periostin was detectable and associated with more disease-relevant parameters in asthma than serum periostin. Sputum periostin is worth considering as a phenotype-specific biomarker in asthma as its proximity to the airways may eliminate some of the confounding factors known to affect serum periostin.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9916630PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0281356PLOS

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