Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, United States of America.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Dec 18;14(12):e0226578. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226578. eCollection 2019.
The bacterial growth environment within cystic fibrosis (CF) sputum is complex, dynamic, and shaped by both host and microbial processes. Characterization of the chemical parameters within sputum that stimulate the in vivo growth of airway pathogens (e.g. Pseudomonas aeruginosa) and their associated virulence factors may lead to improved CF treatment strategies. Motivated by conflicting reports of the prevalence and abundance of P. aeruginosa-derived metabolites known as phenazines within CF airway secretions, we sought to quantify these metabolites in sputum using quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. In contrast to our previous work, all phenazines tested (pyocyanin (PYO), phenazine-1-carboxylic acid (PCA), phenazine-1-carboxamide, and 1-hydroxyphenazine) were below detection limits of the instrument (0.1 μM). Instead, we identified a late-eluting compound that shared retention time and absorbance characteristics with PCA, yet generated mass spectra and a fragmentation pattern consistent with ferriprotoporphyrin IX, otherwise known as heme B. These data suggested that UV-vis chromatographic peaks previously attributed to PCA and PYO in sputum were mis-assigned. Indeed, retrospective analysis of raw data from our prior study found that the heme B peak closely matched the peaks assigned to PCA, indicating that the previous study likely uncovered a positive correlation between pulmonary function (percent predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second, or ppFEV1) and heme B, not PCA or any other phenazine. To independently test this observation, we performed a new tandem mass-spectrometry analysis of 71 additional samples provided by the Mountain West CF Consortium Sputum Biomarker study and revealed a positive correlation (ρ = -0.47, p<0.001) between sputum heme concentrations and ppFEV1. Given that hemoptysis is strongly associated with airway inflammation, pulmonary exacerbations and impaired lung function, these new data suggest that heme B may be a useful biomarker of CF pathophysiology.
囊性纤维化 (CF) 痰液中的细菌生长环境复杂、动态,受到宿主和微生物过程的共同影响。对痰液中刺激气道病原体(如铜绿假单胞菌)及其相关毒力因子体内生长的化学参数进行特征描述,可能会改善 CF 的治疗策略。由于先前关于 CF 气道分泌物中称为吩嗪的铜绿假单胞菌衍生代谢物的流行率和丰度的报告相互矛盾,我们试图使用四极杆飞行时间质谱法定量检测痰液中的这些代谢物。与我们之前的工作不同,所有测试的吩嗪(绿脓菌素 (PYO)、吩嗪-1-羧酸 (PCA)、吩嗪-1-羧酰胺和 1-羟基吩嗪)均低于仪器的检测限(0.1 μM)。相反,我们鉴定出一种迟洗脱化合物,其保留时间和吸光度特征与 PCA 相同,但产生的质谱和碎片模式与亚铁原卟啉 IX 一致,后者也称为血红素 B。这些数据表明,先前在痰液中被归因于 PCA 和 PYO 的 UV-vis 色谱峰被错误分配。事实上,对我们之前研究的原始数据进行回顾性分析发现,血红素 B 峰与分配给 PCA 的峰非常匹配,这表明之前的研究可能揭示了肺功能(预计用力呼气量的 1 秒百分比,或 ppFEV1)与血红素 B 之间的正相关,而不是 PCA 或任何其他吩嗪。为了独立验证这一观察结果,我们对来自 Mountain West CF 联盟痰液生物标志物研究的 71 个额外样本进行了新的串联质谱分析,结果显示痰液血红素浓度与 ppFEV1 之间呈正相关(ρ=-0.47,p<0.001)。鉴于咯血与气道炎症、肺部恶化和肺功能受损密切相关,这些新数据表明血红素 B 可能是 CF 病理生理学的有用生物标志物。