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In an effort to begin validating the large number of discovered candidate biomarkers, proteomics is beginning to shift from shotgun proteomic experiments towards targeted proteomic approaches that provide solutions to automation and economic concerns. Such approaches to validate biomarkers necessitate the mass spectrometric analysis of hundreds to thousands of human

In an effort to begin validating the large number of discovered candidate biomarkers, proteomics is beginning to shift from shotgun proteomic experiments towards targeted proteomic approaches that provide solutions to automation and economic concerns. Such approaches to validate biomarkers necessitate the mass spectrometric analysis of hundreds to thousands of human samples. As this takes place, a serendipitous opportunity has become evident. By the virtue that as one narrows the focus towards "single" protein targets (instead of entire proteomes) using pan-antibody-based enrichment techniques, a discovery science has emerged, so to speak. This is due to the largely unknown context in which "single" proteins exist in blood (i.e. polymorphisms, transcript variants, and posttranslational modifications) and hence, targeted proteomics has applications for established biomarkers. Furthermore, besides protein heterogeneity accounting for interferences with conventional immunometric platforms, it is becoming evident that this formerly hidden dimension of structural information also contains rich-pathobiological information. Consequently, targeted proteomics studies that aim to ascertain a protein's genuine presentation within disease- stratified populations and serve as a stepping-stone within a biomarker translational pipeline are of clinical interest. Roughly 128 million Americans are pre-diabetic, diabetic, and/or have kidney disease and public and private spending for treating these diseases is in the hundreds of billions of dollars. In an effort to create new solutions for the early detection and management of these conditions, described herein is the design, development, and translation of mass spectrometric immunoassays targeted towards diabetes and kidney disease. Population proteomics experiments were performed for the following clinically relevant proteins: insulin, C-peptide, RANTES, and parathyroid hormone. At least thirty-eight protein isoforms were detected. Besides the numerous disease correlations confronted within the disease-stratified cohorts, certain isoforms also appeared to be causally related to the underlying pathophysiology and/or have therapeutic implications. Technical advancements include multiplexed isoform quantification as well a "dual- extraction" methodology for eliminating non-specific proteins while simultaneously validating isoforms. Industrial efforts towards widespread clinical adoption are also described. Consequently, this work lays a foundation for the translation of mass spectrometric immunoassays into the clinical arena and simultaneously presents the most recent advancements concerning the mass spectrometric immunoassay approach.
ContributorsOran, Paul (Author) / Nelson, Randall (Thesis advisor) / Hayes, Mark (Thesis advisor) / Ros, Alexandra (Committee member) / Williams, Peter (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Description
Food system and health characteristics were evaluated across the last Waorani hunter-gatherer group in Amazonian Ecuador and a remote neighboring Kichwa indigenous subsistence agriculture community. Hunter-gatherer food systems like the Waorani foragers may not only be nutritionally, but also pharmaceutically beneficial because of high dietary intake of varied plant phytochemical

Food system and health characteristics were evaluated across the last Waorani hunter-gatherer group in Amazonian Ecuador and a remote neighboring Kichwa indigenous subsistence agriculture community. Hunter-gatherer food systems like the Waorani foragers may not only be nutritionally, but also pharmaceutically beneficial because of high dietary intake of varied plant phytochemical compounds. A modern diet that reduces these dietary plant defense phytochemicals below levels typical in human evolutionary history may leave humans vulnerable to diseases that were controlled through a foraging diet. Few studies consider the health impact of the recent drastic reduction of plant phytochemical content in the modern global food system, which has eliminated essential components of food because they are not considered "nutrients". The antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory nature of the food system may not only regulate infectious pathogens and inflammatory disease, but also support beneficial microbes in human hosts, reducing vulnerability to chronic diseases. Waorani foragers seem immune to certain infections with very low rates of chronic disease. Does returning to certain characteristics of a foraging food system begin to restore the human body microbe balance and inflammatory response to evolutionary norms, and if so, what implication does this have for the treatment of disease? Several years of data on dietary and health differences across the foragers and the farmers was gathered. There were major differences in health outcomes across the board. In the Waorani forager group there were no signs of infection in serious wounds such as 3rd degree burns and spear wounds. The foragers had one-degree lower body temperature than the farmers. The Waorani had an absence of signs of chronic diseases including vision and blood pressure that did not change markedly with age while Kichwa farmers suffered from both chronic diseases and physiological indicators of aging. In the Waorani forager population, there was an absence of many common regional infectious diseases, from helminthes to staphylococcus. Study design helped control for confounders (exercise, environment, genetic factors, non-phytochemical dietary intake). This study provides evidence of the major role total phytochemical dietary intake plays in human health, often not considered by policymakers and nutritional and agricultural scientists.
ContributorsLondon, Douglas (Author) / Tsuda, Takeyuki (Thesis advisor) / Beezhold, Bonnie L (Committee member) / Hruschka, Daniel (Committee member) / Eder, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Signal processing techniques have been used extensively in many engineering problems and in recent years its application has extended to non-traditional research fields such as biological systems. Many of these applications require extraction of a signal or parameter of interest from degraded measurements. One such application is mass spectrometry immunoassay

Signal processing techniques have been used extensively in many engineering problems and in recent years its application has extended to non-traditional research fields such as biological systems. Many of these applications require extraction of a signal or parameter of interest from degraded measurements. One such application is mass spectrometry immunoassay (MSIA) which has been one of the primary methods of biomarker discovery techniques. MSIA analyzes protein molecules as potential biomarkers using time of flight mass spectrometry (TOF-MS). Peak detection in TOF-MS is important for biomarker analysis and many other MS related application. Though many peak detection algorithms exist, most of them are based on heuristics models. One of the ways of detecting signal peaks is by deploying stochastic models of the signal and noise observations. Likelihood ratio test (LRT) detector, based on the Neyman-Pearson (NP) lemma, is an uniformly most powerful test to decision making in the form of a hypothesis test. The primary goal of this dissertation is to develop signal and noise models for the electrospray ionization (ESI) TOF-MS data. A new method is proposed for developing the signal model by employing first principles calculations based on device physics and molecular properties. The noise model is developed by analyzing MS data from careful experiments in the ESI mass spectrometer. A non-flat baseline in MS data is common. The reasons behind the formation of this baseline has not been fully comprehended. A new signal model explaining the presence of baseline is proposed, though detailed experiments are needed to further substantiate the model assumptions. Signal detection schemes based on these signal and noise models are proposed. A maximum likelihood (ML) method is introduced for estimating the signal peak amplitudes. The performance of the detection methods and ML estimation are evaluated with Monte Carlo simulation which shows promising results. An application of these methods is proposed for fractional abundance calculation for biomarker analysis, which is mathematically robust and fundamentally different than the current algorithms. Biomarker panels for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease are analyzed using existing MS analysis algorithms. Finally, a support vector machine based multi-classification algorithm is developed for evaluating the biomarkers' effectiveness in discriminating type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases and is shown to perform better than a linear discriminant analysis based classifier.
ContributorsBuddi, Sai (Author) / Taylor, Thomas (Thesis advisor) / Cochran, Douglas (Thesis advisor) / Nelson, Randall (Committee member) / Duman, Tolga (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
This dissertation is intended to tie together a body of work which utilizes a variety of methods to study applied mathematical models involving heterogeneity often omitted with classical modeling techniques. I posit three cogent classifications of heterogeneity: physiological, behavioral, and local (specifically connectivity in this work). I consider physiological heterogeneity

This dissertation is intended to tie together a body of work which utilizes a variety of methods to study applied mathematical models involving heterogeneity often omitted with classical modeling techniques. I posit three cogent classifications of heterogeneity: physiological, behavioral, and local (specifically connectivity in this work). I consider physiological heterogeneity using the method of transport equations to study heterogeneous susceptibility to diseases in open populations (those with births and deaths). I then present three separate models of behavioral heterogeneity. An SIS/SAS model of gonorrhea transmission in a population of highly active men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM) is presented to study the impact of safe behavior (prevention and self-awareness) on the prevalence of this endemic disease. Behavior is modeled in this examples via static parameters describing consistent condom use and frequency of STD testing. In an example of behavioral heterogeneity, in the absence of underlying dynamics, I present a generalization to ``test theory without an answer key" (also known as cultural consensus modeling or CCM). CCM is commonly used to study the distribution of cultural knowledge within a population. The generalized framework presented allows for selecting the best model among various extensions of CCM: multiple subcultures, estimating the degree to which individuals guess yes, and making competence homogenous in the population. This permits model selection based on the principle of information criteria. The third behaviorally heterogeneous model studies adaptive behavioral response based on epidemiological-economic theory within an $SIR$ epidemic setting. Theorems used to analyze the stability of such models with a generalized, non-linear incidence structure are adapted and applied to the case of standard incidence and adaptive incidence. As an example of study in spatial heterogeneity I provide an explicit solution to a generalization of the continuous time approximation of the Albert-Barabasi scale-free network algorithm. The solution is found by recursively solving the differential equations via integrating factors, identifying a pattern for the coefficients and then proving this observed pattern is consistent using induction. An application to disease dynamics on such evolving structures is then studied.
ContributorsMorin, Benjamin (Author) / Castillo-Chavez, Carlos (Thesis advisor) / Hiebeler, David (Thesis advisor) / Hruschka, Daniel (Committee member) / Suslov, Sergei (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Cancer claims hundreds of thousands of lives every year in US alone. Finding ways for early detection of cancer onset is crucial for better management and treatment of cancer. Thus, biomarkers especially protein biomarkers, being the functional units which reflect dynamic physiological changes, need to be discovered. Though important, there

Cancer claims hundreds of thousands of lives every year in US alone. Finding ways for early detection of cancer onset is crucial for better management and treatment of cancer. Thus, biomarkers especially protein biomarkers, being the functional units which reflect dynamic physiological changes, need to be discovered. Though important, there are only a few approved protein cancer biomarkers till date. To accelerate this process, fast, comprehensive and affordable assays are required which can be applied to large population studies. For this, these assays should be able to comprehensively characterize and explore the molecular diversity of nominally "single" proteins across populations. This information is usually unavailable with commonly used immunoassays such as ELISA (enzyme linked immunosorbent assay) which either ignore protein microheterogeneity, or are confounded by it. To this end, mass spectrometric immuno assays (MSIA) for three different human plasma proteins have been developed. These proteins viz. IGF-1, hemopexin and tetranectin have been found in reported literature to show correlations with many diseases along with several carcinomas. Developed assays were used to extract entire proteins from plasma samples and subsequently analyzed on mass spectrometric platforms. Matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometric techniques where used due to their availability and suitability for the analysis. This resulted in visibility of different structural forms of these proteins showing their structural micro-heterogeneity which is invisible to commonly used immunoassays. These assays are fast, comprehensive and can be applied in large sample studies to analyze proteins for biomarker discovery.
ContributorsRai, Samita (Author) / Nelson, Randall (Thesis advisor) / Hayes, Mark (Thesis advisor) / Borges, Chad (Committee member) / Ros, Alexandra (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Microfluidic platforms have been exploited extensively as a tool for the separation of particles by electric field manipulation. Microfluidic devices can facilitate the manipulation of particles by dielectrophoresis. Separation of particles by size and type has been demonstrated by insulator-based dielectrophoresis in a microfluidic device. Thus, manipulating particles by size

Microfluidic platforms have been exploited extensively as a tool for the separation of particles by electric field manipulation. Microfluidic devices can facilitate the manipulation of particles by dielectrophoresis. Separation of particles by size and type has been demonstrated by insulator-based dielectrophoresis in a microfluidic device. Thus, manipulating particles by size has been widely studied throughout the years. It has been shown that size-heterogeneity in organelles has been linked to multiple diseases from abnormal organelle size. Here, a mixture of two sizes of polystyrene beads (0.28 and 0.87 μm) was separated by a ratchet migration mechanism under a continuous flow (20 nL/min). Furthermore, to achieve high-throughput separation, different ratchet devices were designed to achieve high-volume separation. Recently, enormous efforts have been made to manipulate small size DNA and proteins. Here, a microfluidic device comprising of multiple valves acting as insulating constrictions when a potential is applied is presented. The tunability of the electric field gradient is evaluated by a COMSOL model, indicating that high electric field gradients can be reached by deflecting the valve at a certain distance. Experimentally, the tunability of the dynamic constriction was demonstrated by conducting a pressure study to estimate the gap distance between the valve and the substrate at different applied pressures. Finally, as a proof of principle, 0.87 μm polystyrene beads were manipulated by dielectrophoresis. These microfluidic platforms will aid in the understanding of size-heterogeneity of organelles for biomolecular assessment and achieve separation of nanometer-size DNA and proteins by dielectrophoresis.
ContributorsOrtiz, Ricardo (Author) / Ros, Alexandra (Thesis advisor) / Hayes, Mark (Committee member) / Borges, Chad (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Plasma and serum are the most commonly used liquid biospecimens in biomarker research. These samples may be subjected to several pre-analytical variables (PAVs) during collection, processing and storage. Exposure to thawed conditions (temperatures above -30 °C) is a PAV that is hard to control, and track and could provide misleading

Plasma and serum are the most commonly used liquid biospecimens in biomarker research. These samples may be subjected to several pre-analytical variables (PAVs) during collection, processing and storage. Exposure to thawed conditions (temperatures above -30 °C) is a PAV that is hard to control, and track and could provide misleading information, that fail to accurately reveal the in vivo biological reality, when unaccounted for. Hence, assays that can empirically check the integrity of plasma and serum samples are crucial. As a solution to this issue, an assay titled ΔS-Cys-Albumin was developed and validated. The reference range of ΔS-Cys-Albumin in cardio vascular patients was determined and the change in ΔS-Cys-Albumin values in different samples over time course incubations at room temperature, 4 °C and -20 °C were evaluated. In blind challenges, this assay proved to be successful in identifying improperly stored samples individually and as groups. Then, the correlation between the instability of several clinically important proteins in plasma from healthy and cancer patients at room temperature, 4 °C and -20 °C was assessed. Results showed a linear inverse relationship between the percentage of proteins destabilized and ΔS-Cys-Albumin regardless of the specific time or temperature of exposure, proving ΔS-Cys-Albumin as an effective surrogate marker to track the stability of clinically relevant analytes in plasma. The stability of oxidized LDL in serum at different temperatures was assessed in serum samples and it stayed stable at all temperatures evaluated. The ΔS-Cys-Albumin requires the use of an LC-ESI-MS instrument which limits its availability to most clinical research laboratories. To overcome this hurdle, an absorbance-based assay that can be measured using a plate reader was developed as an alternative to the ΔS-Cys-Albumin assay. Assay development and analytical validation procedures are reported herein. After that, the range of absorbance in plasma and serum from control and cancer patients were determined and the change in absorbance over a time course incubation at room temperature, 4 °C and -20 °C was assessed. The results showed that the absorbance assay would act as a good alternative to the ΔS-Cys-Albumin assay.
ContributorsJehanathan, Nilojan (Author) / Borges, Chad (Thesis advisor) / Guo, Jia (Committee member) / Van Horn, Wade (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Social norms are unwritten behavioral codes. They direct individual behaviors, facilitate interpersonal coordination and cooperation, and lead to variation among human populations. Understanding how norms are maintained and how they change is critical for understanding human evolutionary psychology, social organization, and cultural change. This dissertation uses a mathematical model and

Social norms are unwritten behavioral codes. They direct individual behaviors, facilitate interpersonal coordination and cooperation, and lead to variation among human populations. Understanding how norms are maintained and how they change is critical for understanding human evolutionary psychology, social organization, and cultural change. This dissertation uses a mathematical model and a field study to answer two questions: First, what factors determine the content and dynamics of a social norm? Second, how do people make decisions in a normative context? The mathematical model finds that contrary to the popular belief that even arbitrary or deleterious social norms can be maintained once established because deviants suffer coordination failures and social sanctions, norms with continuously varying options cannot be maintained by the pressure to do what others do. Instead, continuous norms evolve to the optimum determined by environmental pressure, individual preferences, or cognitive processes. Therefore, the content of norms across human societies may be less historically constrained than previously assumed. The field study shows that unlike what rational choice theory predicts, people in a small-scale subsistence society do not calculate the ecological and social payoffs of different behaviors in a normative context, even when they have the information to do so. Instead, they rely heavily on social information about what others do. This decision-making algorithm, together with mental categorization that ignores small deviations, and cognitive biases that favor the division prescribed by the norm, maintain an ecologically inefficient and widely disliked cooperative surplus division norm in a Derung village, Dizhengdang, in Yunnan, China.
ContributorsYan, Minhua (Author) / Boyd, Robert (Thesis advisor) / Mathew, Sarah (Thesis advisor) / Hruschka, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Trace evidence is an essential component of forensic investigations. Anthropogenicmaterials such as fibers and glass have been well studied for use in forensic trace evidence, but the potential use of retroreflective beads found in soils for forensic investigations is largely unexplored. Retroreflective glass beads are tiny spheres mixed into pavement

Trace evidence is an essential component of forensic investigations. Anthropogenicmaterials such as fibers and glass have been well studied for use in forensic trace evidence, but the potential use of retroreflective beads found in soils for forensic investigations is largely unexplored. Retroreflective glass beads are tiny spheres mixed into pavement markings to create reflective surfaces to reduce lane departure accidents. Retroreflective glass beads are a potentially new source of trace evidence for forensic investigations. Analysis of the spatial distribution and chemical compositions of retroreflective glass beads recovered from 17 soil samples were analyzed and compared to see if there are striking variations that can distinguish samples by source. Soil samples taken near marked roads showed significantly higher concentrations of glass beads, averaging from 0.18 bead/g of soil sample to 587 beads/g of soil, while soil samples taken near unmarked roads had average range of concentration of 0 bead/g of soil to 0.21 bead/g of soil. Retroreflective glass beads come from pavement markings, thus soil samples near marked roads are expected to have higher concentrations of glass beads. Analysis of spatial distribution of glass beads showed that as sample collection moved further from the road, concentration of glass beads decreased. ICP-MS results of elemental concentrations for each sample showed discriminative differences between samples, for most of the elements. An analysis of variance for elemental concentrations was conducted, and results showed statistically significant differences, beyond random chance alone for half of the elements analyzed. For forensic comparisons, a significant difference in even just one element is enough to conclude that the samples came from different sources. The elemental concentrations of glass beads collected from the same location, but of varying differences, was also analyzed. ANOVA results show significant differences for only one or two elements. A pair-wise t-test was conducted to determine which elements are most discriminative among all the samples. Rubidium was found to be the most discriminative, showing significant difference for 67% of the pairs. Beryllium, potassium, and manganese were also highly discriminative, showing significant difference for at least 50% of all the pairs.
ContributorsGomez, Janelle Kate Pacifico (Author) / Montero, Shirly (Thesis advisor) / Herckes, Pierre (Thesis advisor) / Borges, Chad (Committee member) / Gordon, Gwyneth (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is the result of an autoimmune attack against the insulin-producing β-cells of the pancreas causing hyperglycemia and requiring the individual to rely on life-long exogenous insulin. With the age of onset typically occurring in childhood, there is increased physical and emotional stress to the child as

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is the result of an autoimmune attack against the insulin-producing β-cells of the pancreas causing hyperglycemia and requiring the individual to rely on life-long exogenous insulin. With the age of onset typically occurring in childhood, there is increased physical and emotional stress to the child as well as caregivers to maintain appropriate glucose levels. The majority of T1D patients have antibodies to one or more antigens: insulin, IA-2, GAD65, and ZnT8. Although antibodies are detectable years before symptoms occur, the initiating factors and mechanisms of progression towards β-cell destruction are still not known. The search for new autoantibodies to elucidate the autoimmune process in diabetes has been slow, with proteome level screenings on native proteins only finding a few minor antigens. Post-translational modifications (PTM)—chemical changes that occur to the protein after translation is complete—are an unexplored way a self-protein could become immunogenic. This dissertation presents the first large sale screening of autoantibodies in T1D to nitrated proteins. The Contra Capture Protein Array (CCPA) allowed for fresh expression of hundreds of proteins that were captured on a secondary slide by tag-specific ligand and subsequent modification with peroxynitrite. The IgG and IgM humoral response of 48 newly diagnosed T1D subjects and 48 age-matched controls were screened against 1632 proteins highly or specifically expressed in pancreatic cells. Top targets at 95% specificity were confirmed with the same serum samples using rapid antigenic protein in situ display enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (RAPID ELISA) a modified sandwich ELISA employing the same cell-free expression as the CCPA. For validation, 8 IgG and 5 IgM targets were evaluated with an independent serum sample set of 94 T1D subjects and 94 controls. The two best candidates at 90% specificity were estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1) and phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase type 2 beta (PI4K2B) which had sensitivities of 22% (p=.014) and 25% (p=.045), respectively. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses found an area under curve (AUC) of 0.6 for ESR1 and 0.58 for PI4K2B. These studies demonstrate the ability and value for high-throughput autoantibody screening to modified antigens and the frequency of Type 1 diabetes.
ContributorsHesterman, Jennifer (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Thesis advisor) / Borges, Chad (Committee member) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022