Frontiers in Pediatrics (Dec 2023)

The proteomic fingerprint in infants with single ventricle heart disease in the interstage period: evidence of chronic inflammation and widespread activation of biological networks

  • Lindsay M. Thomson,
  • Christopher A. Mancuso,
  • Kelly R. Wolfe,
  • Ludmila Khailova,
  • Sierra Niemiec,
  • Eiman Ali,
  • Michael DiMaria,
  • Max Mitchell,
  • Mark Twite,
  • Gareth Morgan,
  • Benjamin S. Frank,
  • Jesse A. Davidson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2023.1308700
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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IntroductionChildren with single ventricle heart disease (SVHD) experience significant morbidity across systems and time, with 70% of patients experiencing acute kidney injury, 33% neurodevelopmental impairment, 14% growth failure, and 5.5% of patients suffering necrotizing enterocolitis. Proteomics is a method to identify new biomarkers and mechanisms of injury in complex physiologic states.MethodsInfants with SVHD in the interstage period were compared to similar-age healthy controls. Serum samples were collected, stored at −80°C, and run on a panel of 1,500 proteins in single batch analysis (Somalogic Inc., CO). Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) was used to compare the proteomic profile of cases and controls and t-tests to detect differences in individual proteins (FDR <0.05). Protein network analysis with functional enrichment was performed in STRING and Cytoscape.ResultsPLS-DA readily discriminated between SVHD cases (n = 33) and controls (n = 24) based on their proteomic pattern alone (Accuracy = 0.96, R2 = 0.97, Q2 = 0.80). 568 proteins differed between groups (FDR <0.05). We identified 25 up-regulated functional clusters and 13 down-regulated. Active biological systems fell into six key groups: angiogenesis and cell proliferation/turnover, immune system activation and inflammation, altered metabolism, neural development, gastrointestinal system, and cardiac physiology and development.ConclusionsWe report a clear differentiation in the circulating proteome of patients with SVHD and healthy controls with >500 circulating proteins distinguishing the groups. These proteomic data identify widespread protein dysregulation across multiple biologic systems with promising biological plausibility as drivers of SVHD morbidity.

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