First Trimester Protein Biomarkers for Risk of Spontaneous Preterm Birth: Identifying a Critical Need for More Rigorous Approaches to Biomarker Identification and Validation.

2020 
BACKGROUND: Spontaneous preterm birth is the leading cause of perinatal morbidity and mortality worldwide and continues to present a major clinical dilemma. We previously reported that a number of protein species were dysregulated in maternal serum collected at 11-13+6 weeks' gestation from pregnancies that continued to labour spontaneously and deliver preterm. OBJECTIVES AND METHODS: In this study, we aimed to validate changes seen in 4 candidate protein species: alpha-1-antitrypsin, vitamin D-binding protein (VDBP), alpha-1beta-glycoprotein and apolipoprotein A-1 in a larger cohort of women using a western blot approach. RESULTS: Serum levels of all 4 proteins were reduced in women who laboured spontaneously and delivered preterm. This reduction was significant for VDBP (p = 0.04), which has been shown to be involved in a plethora of essential biological functions, including actin scavenging, fatty acid transport, macrophage activation and chemotaxis. CONCLUSIONS: The decrease in select proteoforms of VDBP may result in an imbalance in the optimal intrauterine environment for the developing foetus as well as to a successful uncomplicated pregnancy. Thus, certain (phosphorylated) species of VDBP may be of value in developing a targeted approach to the early prediction of spontaneous preterm labour. Importantly, this study raises the importance of a focus on proteoforms and the need for any biomarker validation process to most effectively take these into account rather than the more widespread practice of simply focussing on the primary amino acid sequence of a protein.
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