figshare
Browse
1/1
2 files

Sources of variability in quantifying circulating thymosin beta-4: literature review and recommendations

dataset
posted on 2018-03-12, 11:50 authored by Warren K. Y. Tan, Kristy Purnamawati, Leroy S. Pakkiri, Sock Hwee Tan, Xiaoxun Yang, Mark Y. Chan, Chester L. Drum

Introduction: Thymosin beta-4 (TB4) is an endogenous peptide with protective and regenerative effects in models of cellular and organ injury. TB4 is increasingly measured as a potential plasma or serum biomarker in human cardiovascular, liver, infectious, and autoimmune disease.

Areas covered: The focus of this review is the quantification of TB4 in clinical cohort studies and whether reported TB4 concentrations differ with respect to method of sample preparation. We survey current literature for studies measuring TB4 in human serum or plasma and compare reported concentrations in healthy controls.

Expert opinion: We find substantial intra- and inter- study variability in healthy controls, and a lack of protocol standardization. We further highlight three factors that may confound TB4 clinical measurements and should be considered in future study design: 1) residual platelets remaining in suspension after centrifugation, 2) TB4 release following ex vivo platelet activation, and 3) specificity of assays towards posttranslational modifications. Accordingly, we put forth our recommendations to minimize residual and activated platelets during sample collection, and to cross-validate TB4 measurements using both antibody-based and mass spectrometry-based methods.

Funding

This paper received funding from the Agency for Science, Technology and Research [SPF2014/001] and the National Medical Research Council of the Singapore Ministry of Health [NMRC/CG/014/2013]. W.K.Y. Tan is financially supported by a PhD scholarship from the NUS Graduate School for Integrative Sciences and Engineering (NGS). This paper has been published as part of a supplement issue covering the proceedings of the Fifth International Symposium on Thymosins in Health and Disease and is funded by SciClone Pharmaceuticals.

History