Science and Research

Molecular Origin of Blood-Based Infrared Spectroscopic Fingerprints*

Infrared spectroscopy of liquid biopsies is a time- and cost-effective approach that may advance biomedical diagnostics. However, the molecular nature of disease-related changes of infrared molecular fingerprints (IMFs) remains poorly understood, impeding the method's applicability. Here we probe 148 human blood sera and reveal the origin of the variations in their IMFs. To that end, we supplemented infrared spectroscopy with biochemical fractionation and proteomic profiling, providing molecular information about serum composition. Using lung cancer as an example of a medical condition, we demonstrate that the disease-related differences in IMFs are dominated by contributions from twelve highly abundant proteins-that, if used as a pattern, may be instrumental for detecting malignancy. Tying proteomic to spectral information and machine learning advances our understanding of the infrared spectra of liquid biopsies, a framework that could be applied to probing of any disease.

  • Voronina, L.
  • Leonardo, C.
  • Mueller-Reif, J. B.
  • Geyer, P. E.
  • Huber, M.
  • Trubetskov, M.
  • Kepesidis, K. V.
  • Behr, J.
  • Mann, M.
  • Krausz, F.
  • Žigman, M.

Keywords

  • *Dermatoglyphics
  • Humans
  • Machine Learning
  • *Proteomics
  • Spectrophotometry, Infrared
  • *IR spectroscopy
  • *cancer
  • *infrared molecular fingerprinting
  • *liquid biopsy
Publication details
DOI: 10.1002/anie.202103272
Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
Pages: 17060-17069 
Number: 31
Work Type: Original
Location: CPC-M
Disease Area: General Lung and Other
Partner / Member: KUM
Access-Number: 33881784

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