Human mRNA in saliva can correctly identify individuals harboring acute infection
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated the poor ability of body temperature to reliably identify SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals, an observation that has been made before in the context of other infectious diseases. While acute infection does not always cause fever, it does reliably drive host transcriptional responses as the body responds at the site of infection. These transcriptional changes can occur both in cells that are directly harboring replicating pathogens and in cells elsewhere that receive a molecular signal that infection is occurring. Here, we identify a core set of approximately 70 human genes that are together upregulated in cultured human cells infected by a broad array of viral, bacterial, and fungal pathogens. We have named these “core response” genes. In theory, transcripts from these genes could serve as biomarkers of infection in the human body, in a way that is agnostic to the specific pathogen causing infection. As such, we perform human studies to show that these infection-induced human transcripts can be measured in the saliva of people harboring different types of infections. The number of these transcripts in saliva can correctly classify infection status (whether a person harbors an infection) 91% of the time. Furthermore, in the case of SARS-CoV-2 specifically, the number of core response transcripts in saliva correctly identifies infectious individuals even when enrollees, themselves, are asymptomatic and do not know they are infected.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Dec 19, 2023
- Source ID
- 10.1128/mbio.01712-23
Entities
People
- Camille L. Paige
- Carolyn J Decker
- Daniel B. Larremore
- Elena Lian
- Eric Poeschla
- Halley R. Steiner
- James H. Morrison
- Nicholas R. Meyerson
- Qing Yang
- Robin D. Dowell
- Roy Parker
- Rushika Perera
- Sara L. Sawyer
- Stephen K. Clark
- Will T. Fattor
Organizations
- Boettcher Foundation
- Burroughs Wellcome Fund
- Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade
- Colorado State University
- Defense Threat Reduction Agency
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- Santa Fe Institute
- University of Colorado Boulder
- University of Colorado School of Medicine