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Recent Articles
Landowski CP, Godfrey HP, Bentley-Hibbert SI, Liu X, Huang Z, Sepulveda
R, Huygen K, Gennaro ML, Moy FH, Lesley SA, Haak-Frendscho M.J.
Combinatorial use of antibodies to secreted mycobacterial
proteins in a host immune system-independent test for tuberculosis.
J Clin Microbiol 2001 Jul;39(7):2418-24
PMID: 11427548
Laboratory diagnosis of tuberculosis is often difficult. Immunodetection
of circulating Mycobacterium tuberculosis proteins shed during active
infection would not depend on an intact host immune response and
could take advantage of the speed and low costs afforded by antibody-based
assays. We previously showed that patients with active tuberculosis
had increased levels of circulating antigen 85 (Ag85) proteins independent
of their tuberculin skin test status (S. I. Bentley-Hibbert, X.
Quan, T. Newman, K. Huygen, and H. P. Godfrey, Infect. Immun. 67:581-588,
1999). To extend these observations to a Mycobacterium bovis BCG-vaccinated
population and to another secreted mycobacterial protein, Ag85 and
PstS-1 (protein antigen B, p38 antigen) were quantified in sera
from 97 Chilean tuberculosis patients and healthy controls (many
of whom had received BCG as children) using dot immunobinding, mouse
monoclonal anti-BCG Ag85 complex antibody, and chicken antipeptide
antibodies reactive with M. tuberculosis Ag85B and PstS-1. The latter
antibodies had been raised to peptide-derived immunogens expressed
on a novel proprietary protein carrier in Escherichia coli. Median
serum Ag85 levels measured by using either anti-Ag85 antibody were
significantly higher in patients with active tuberculosis than in
healthy controls (P, <0.001 to 0.01); the median serum PstS-1
levels were similar in patients and controls. The sensitivity of
significantly elevated circulating Ag85 levels in patients with
pulmonary tuberculosis measured by anti-Ag85 complex or anti-Ag85B
antibodies was 60 and 55%, respectively, but increased to 77% when
results obtained with both anti-Ag85 antibodies were considered
jointly (P < 0.02). The corresponding specificities for individual
and joint consideration were 95, 85, and 80%, respectively. These
results indicate that elevated Ag85 levels can be detected in patients
with active tuberculosis even after BCG vaccination and suggest
that combinatorial use of antibodies directed at different epitopes
of this protein could provide a viable strategy for developing new
host immune response-independent diagnostic tests for tuberculosis.

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