Scientific Reports (Jan 2024)

Early detection of liver injuries by the Serum enhanced binding test sensitive to albumin post-transcriptional modifications

  • Souleiman El Balkhi,
  • Mohamad Ali Rahali,
  • Roy Lakis,
  • François Ludovic Sauvage,
  • Marving Martin,
  • Angelika Janaszkiewicz,
  • Roland Lawson,
  • Ruben Goncalves,
  • Paul Carrier,
  • Veronique Loustaud-Ratti,
  • Anne Guyot,
  • Pierre Marquet,
  • Florent Di Meo,
  • Franck Saint-Marcoux

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-51412-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Early and sensitive biomarkers of liver dysfunction and drug-induced liver injury (DILI) are still needed, both for patient care and drug development. We developed the Serum Enhanced Binding (SEB) test to reveal post-transcriptional modifications (PTMs) of human serum albumin resulting from hepatocyte dysfunctions and further evaluated its performance in an animal model. The SEB test consists in spiking serum ex-vivo with ligands having specific binding sites related to the most relevant albumin PTMs and measuring their unbound fraction. To explore the hypothesis that albumin PTMs occur early during liver injury and can also be detected by the SEB test, we induced hepatotoxicity in male albino Wistar rats by administering high daily doses of ethanol and CCl4 over several days. Blood was collected for characterization and quantification of albumin isoforms by high-resolution mass spectrometry, for classical biochemical analyses as well as to apply the SEB test. In the exposed rats, the appearance of albumin isoforms paralleled the positivity of the SEB test ligands and histological injuries. These were observed as early as D3 in the Ethanol and CCl4 groups, whereas the classical liver tests (ALT, AST, PAL) significantly increased only at D7. The behavior of several ligands was supported by structural and molecular simulation analysis. The SEB test and albumin isoforms revealed hepatocyte damage early, before the current biochemical biomarkers. The SEB test should be easier to implement in the clinics than albumin isoform profiling.