Artificial Cells, Nanomedicine, and Biotechnology (Jan 2021)
Identification of a detection panel for post-transplant virus infection through integrated analysis of non-coding RNAs in peripheral blood
Abstract
Viral infection seriously affects the survival and life quality of transplanted patients without an accurate diagnosis during the early stage. Herein, we aimed to develop a novel diagnostic method based on non-coding RNAs expression in peripheral blood. An immunosuppressive mouse model of viral infection after transplantation was established. Differentially expressed non-coding RNAs were distinguished by microarray analyses in the virus-infected group. After homology analysis, 46 miRNAs and 24 lncRNAs were further verified by qRT-PCR in the peripheral blood samples of transplanted patients. Compared with normal transplanted patients, miR-29b, miR-185, and NR_073415.2 were significantly downregulated in the PBMC of post-transplant patients with viral infection. Based on the expression of the above three RNAs, principal component analysis (PCA) identified a slight overlap between the two groups. A 3-non-coding-RNA detection panel was constructed by the support vector machine analysis (SVM), whose loss rate was 14.71%. The area under the curve of it was 0.909. With the optimal cut-off value (Y = 0.328), the sensitivity was 0.929 and the specificity was 0.781. Therefore, based on non-coding RNAs expressions, a detection panel for viral infection after organ transplantation was formed with high diagnostic specificity and sensitivity.
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