Full metadata
Title
In vitro and in vivo proteome analysis of Coccidioides posadasii
Description
Coccidioidomycosis (valley fever) is caused by inhalation of arthrospores from soil-dwelling fungi, Coccidioides immitis and C. posadasii. This dimorphic fungus and disease are endemic to the southwestern United States, central valley in California and Mexico. The Genome of Coccidioidies has been sequenced but proteomic studies are absent. To address this gap in knowledge, we generated proteome of Spherulin (lysate of Spherule phase) using LC-MS/MS and identified over 1300 proteins. We also investigated lectin reactivity to spherules in human lung tissue based on the hypothesis that coccidioidal glycosylation is different from mammalian glycosylation, and therefore certain lectins would have differential binding properties to fungal glycoproteins. Lectin-based immunohistochemistry using formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded human lung tissue from human coccidioidomycosis patients demonstrated that Griffonia simplificonia lectin II (GSL II) and succinylated wheat germ agglutinin (sWGA) bound specifically to endospores and spherules in infected lungs, but not to adjacent human tissue. GSL II and sWGA-lectin affinity chromatography using Spherulin, followed by LC-MS/MS was used to isolate and identify 195 proteins that bind to GSL-II lectin and 224 proteins that bind to sWGA lectin. This is the first report that GSL II and sWGA lectins bind specifically to Coccidioides endospores and spherules in infected human tissues. Our list of proteins from spherulin (whole and GSL-II and sWGA binding fraction) may also serve as a Coccidioidal Rosetta-Stone generated from mass spectra to identify proteins from 3 different databases: The Broad Institutes Coccidioides Genomes project, RefSeq and SwissProt. This also serves as a viable avenue for proteomics based diagnostic test development for valley fever. Using lectin chromatography and LC MS/MS, we identified over 100 proteins in plasma of two patients and six proteins in urine of one patient. We also identified over eighty fungal proteins isolated from spherules from biopsied infected lung tissue. This, to the best of our knowledge, is the first such example of detecting coccidioidal proteins in patient blood and urine and provides a foundation for development of a proteomics based diagnostic test as opposed to presently available but unreliable serologic diagnostic tests reliant on an antibody response in the host.
Date Created
2015
Contributors
- Kaushal, Setu (Author)
- Lake, Douglas (Thesis advisor)
- Magee, Dewey Mitchell (Committee member)
- Chandler, Douglas (Committee member)
- Rawls, Jeffery (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
vii, 76 pages : illustrations (mostly color), color map
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36484
Statement of Responsibility
by Setu Kaushal
Description Source
Retrieved on April 19, 2016
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2015
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 61-66)
Field of study: Microbiology
System Created
- 2016-02-01 07:07:12
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:25:32
- 3 years 2 months ago
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