PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Feb 2023)

NHP BurkPx: A multiplex serodiagnostic bead assay to monitor Burkholderia pseudomallei exposures in non-human primates.

  • Kimberly R Celona,
  • Austin B Shannon,
  • Derek Sonderegger,
  • Jinhee Yi,
  • Fernando P Monroy,
  • Christopher Allender,
  • Heidie Hornstra,
  • Mary B Barnes,
  • Elizabeth S Didier,
  • Rudolf P Bohm,
  • Kathrine Phillippi-Falkenstein,
  • Daniel Sanford,
  • Paul Keim,
  • Erik W Settles

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011067
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
p. e0011067

Abstract

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BackgroundMelioidosis is a disease caused by the bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei, infecting humans and non-human primates (NHP) through contaminated soil or water. World-wide there are an estimated 165,000 human melioidosis cases each year, but recordings of NHP cases are sporadic. Clinical detection of melioidosis in humans is primarily by culturing B. pseudomallei, and there are no standardized detection protocols for NHP. NHP are an important animal model for melioidosis research including clinical trials and development of biodefense countermeasures.Methodology/principle findingsWe evaluated the diagnostic potential of the multiple antigen serological assay, BurkPx, in NHP using two sera sets: (i) 115 B. pseudomallei-challenged serum samples from 80 NHP collected each week post-exposure (n = 52) and at euthanasia (n = 47), and (ii) 126 B. pseudomallei-naïve/negative serum samples. We observed early IgM antibody responses to carbohydrate antigens followed by IgG antibody recognition to multiple B. pseudomallei protein antigens during the second week of infection. B. pseudomallei negative serum samples had low to intermediate antibody cross reactivity to the antigens in this assay. Infection time was predicted as the determining factor in the variation of antibody responses, with 77.67% of variation explained by the first component of the principal component analysis. A multiple antigen model generated a binary prediction metric ([Formula: see text]), which when applied to all data resulted in 100% specificity and 63.48% sensitivity. Removal of week 1 B. pseudomallei challenged serum samples increased the sensitivity of the model to 95%.Conclusion/significanceWe employed a previously standardized assay for humans, the BurkPx assay, and assessed its diagnostic potential for detection of B. pseudomallei exposure in NHP. The assay is expected to be useful for surveillance in NHP colonies, in investigations of suspected accidental releases or exposures, and for identifying vaccine correlates of protection.