Naturally occurring human urinary peptides for use in diagnosis of chronic kidney disease.

  • David M Good
  • Petra Zürbig
  • Angel Argilés
  • Hartwig W Bauer
  • Georg Behrens
  • Joshua J Coon
  • Mohammed Dakna
  • Stéphane Decramer
  • Christian Delles
  • Anna F Dominiczak
  • Jochen H H Ehrich
  • Frank Eitner
  • Danilo Fliser
  • Moritz Frommberger
  • Arnold Ganser
  • Mark A Girolami
  • Igor Golovko
  • Wilfried Gwinner
  • Marion Haubitz
  • Stefan Herget-Rosenthal
  • Joachim Jankowski
  • Holger Jahn
  • George Jerums
  • Bruce A Julian
  • Markus Kellmann
  • Volker Kliem
  • Walter Kolch
  • Andrzej S Krolewski
  • Mario Luppi
  • Ziad Massy
  • Michael Melter
  • Christian Neusüss
  • Jan Novak
  • Karlheinz Peter
  • Kasper Rossing
  • Harald Rupprecht
  • Joost P Schanstra
  • Eric Schiffer
  • Jens-Uwe Stolzenburg
  • Lise Tarnow
  • Dan Theodorescu
  • Visith Thongboonkerd
  • Raymond Vanholder
  • Eva M Weissinger
  • Harald Mischak
  • Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin

Abstract

Because of its availability, ease of collection, and correlation with physiology and pathology, urine is an attractive source for clinical proteomics/peptidomics. However, the lack of comparable data sets from large cohorts has greatly hindered the development of clinical proteomics. Here, we report the establishment of a reproducible, high resolution method for peptidome analysis of naturally occurring human urinary peptides and proteins, ranging from 800 to 17,000 Da, using samples from 3,600 individuals analyzed by capillary electrophoresis coupled to MS. All processed data were deposited in an Structured Query Language (SQL) database. This database currently contains 5,010 relevant unique urinary peptides that serve as a pool of potential classifiers for diagnosis and monitoring of various diseases. As an example, by using this source of information, we were able to define urinary peptide biomarkers for chronic kidney diseases, allowing diagnosis of these diseases with high accuracy. Application of the chronic kidney disease-specific biomarker set to an independent test cohort in the subsequent replication phase resulted in 85.5% sensitivity and 100% specificity. These results indicate the potential usefulness of capillary electrophoresis coupled to MS for clinical applications in the analysis of naturally occurring urinary peptides.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number11
ISSN1535-9476
Publication statusPublished - 2010
pubmed 20616184