Abstract

BackgroundRheumatic fever in childhood is the most common cause of Mitral Stenosis in developing countries. The disease is characterized by damaged and deformed mitral valves predisposing them to scarring and narrowing (stenosis) that results in left atrial hypertrophy followed by heart failure. Presently, echocardiography is the main imaging technique used to diagnose Mitral Stenosis. Despite the high prevalence and increased morbidity, no biochemical indicators are available for prediction, diagnosis and management of the disease. Adopting a proteomic approach to study Rheumatic Mitral Stenosis may therefore throw some light in this direction. In our study, we undertook plasma proteomics of human subjects suffering from Rheumatic Mitral Stenosis (n = 6) and Control subjects (n = 6). Six plasma samples, three each from the control and patient groups were pooled and subjected to low abundance protein enrichment. Pooled plasma samples (crude and equalized) were then subjected to in-solution trypsin digestion separately. Digests were analyzed using nano LC-MSE. Data was acquired with the Protein Lynx Global Server v2.5.2 software and searches made against reviewed Homo sapiens database (UniProtKB) for protein identification. Label-free protein quantification was performed in crude plasma only.ResultsA total of 130 proteins spanning 9–192 kDa were identified. Of these 83 proteins were common to both groups and 34 were differentially regulated. Functional annotation of overlapping and differential proteins revealed that more than 50% proteins are involved in inflammation and immune response. This was corroborated by findings from pathway analysis and histopathological studies on excised tissue sections of stenotic mitral valves. Verification of selected protein candidates by immunotechniques in crude plasma corroborated our findings from label-free protein quantification.ConclusionsWe propose that this protein profile of blood plasma, or any of the individual proteins, could serve as a focal point for future mechanistic studies on Mitral Stenosis. In addition, some of the proteins associated with this disorder may be candidate biomarkers for disease diagnosis and prognosis. Our findings might help to enrich existing knowledge on the molecular mechanisms involved in Mitral Stenosis and improve the current diagnostic tools in the long run.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1559-0275-11-35) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Rheumatic fever in childhood is the most common cause of Mitral Stenosis in developing countries

  • Acute rheumatic fever which is a sequelae of Group A Streptococcus throat infection in genetically susceptible individuals, remains the most common reason for Rheumatic Heart Disease (RHD)

  • Left atrial (LA) diameter and left ventricular ejection fraction were found to be significantly different in the patient group than the control group

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Summary

Introduction

Rheumatic fever in childhood is the most common cause of Mitral Stenosis in developing countries. We undertook plasma proteomics of human subjects suffering from Rheumatic Mitral Stenosis (n = 6) and Control subjects (n = 6). Three each from the control and patient groups were pooled and subjected to low abundance protein enrichment. RHD is a chronic acquired heart disorder in children and young adults worldwide [1]. It is a major public health problem in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs) having a global prevalence of at least 15.6 million cases, with 282,000 new cases and registering 233,000 deaths each year [2]. It is characterized by chronic inflammation of the myocardium and heart valves in particular. RHD in mitral valve apparatus manifests most commonly as Mitral Stenosis or Mitral Regurgitation or combination of both producing hemodynamic burden on heart [4]

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