Biological markers (i.e., biomarkers) are essential in clinical and epidemiological studies as they may provide mechanistic insights into the developmental origins of disease, as well as improve diagnostic testing and risk assessment for disease prevention. However, major challenges remain due to the lack of rapid yet selective analytical methods for high throughput screening that are also amenable to volume-restricted specimens. This thesis includes two major research themes that take advantage of capillary electrophoresis (CE) separations, including (1) the targeted analysis of urinary iodide and thiocyanate for assessment of nutritional adequacy and tobacco smoke exposures in the population, and (2) the discovery of new biomarkers in sweat specimens that may improve universal newborn screening programs for cystic fibrosis (CF) infants beyond impaired chloride transport. Chapter II examines the prevalence and risk factors associated with iodine deficiency in 24 h urine samples collected from 800 participants across four clinical sites in Canada as part of the Prospective Urban and Rural Epidemiological (PURE) study when using CE with UV detection in conjunction with sample self-stacking. Importantly, regional variations in iodine status were revealed with participants from Quebec City and Vancouver at greater risk for iodine deficiency than Hamilton and Ottawa. Overall, iodine supplement use, thyroxine prescription, urinary sodium excretion, and self-reported dairy intake were found to be protective factors against iodine deficiency. Chapter III applied a validated CE assay to measure urinary thiocyanate as a biomarker of tobacco smoke and dietary exposures in an international cohort of 1000 participants from the PURE study spanning 14 countries with varied income status, smoking habits, and diet quality. Current smokers residing in high-income countries had the highest extent of cyanide exposure indicative of greater harms from tobacco smoke compared to middle- and low-income countries after adjusting for smoking intensity and other covariates. Chapter IV introduces a rapid CE method with indirect UV detection to simultaneously measure sweat chloride and bicarbonate from presumptive CF infants’ residual sweat samples. Although bicarbonate did not provide clinical value in neonatal CF diagnosis, sweat chloride testing by CE may reduce test failure rates due to insufficient volumes from infants in a clinical setting. Lastly, Chapter V applied an untargeted strategy to characterize the sweat metabolome from presumptive CF infants when using multisegment injection-capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (MSI-CE-MS). A panel of sweat metabolites were found to discriminate CF from non-CF (i.e., unaffected carriers) infants, including aspartic acid, glutamine, oxoproline, and pilocarpic acid, which also correlated with sweat chloride. The clinical utility of these sweat metabolites to prognosticate late-onset CF infants from indeterminate sweat chloride test results was also explored. In summary, this thesis contributes innovative separation methods for biomarker screening and discovery in clinical and epidemiological studies for the prevention and early treatment of human diseases that benefit from optimal nutrition. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/27778 |
Date | January 2022 |
Creators | Mathiaparanam, Stellena |
Contributors | Britz-McKibbin, Philip, Chemistry and Chemical Biology |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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