TY - JOUR
T1 - From Local to Systemic
T2 - The Journey of Tick Bite Biomarkers in Australian Patients
AU - Lee, Wenna
AU - Barbosa, Amanda D.
AU - Lee, Amy Huey Yi
AU - Currie, Andrew
AU - Martino, David
AU - Stenos, John
AU - Long, Michelle
AU - Beaman, Miles
AU - Harvey, Nathan T.
AU - Kresoje, Nina
AU - Skut, Patrycja
AU - Irwin, Peter J.
AU - Kumarasinghe, Prasad
AU - Hall, Roy A.
AU - Ben-Othman, Rym
AU - Graves, Stephen
AU - Kollmann, Tobias R.
AU - Oskam, Charlotte L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/2/11
Y1 - 2025/2/11
N2 - Tick bites and tick-related diseases are on the rise. Diagnostic tests that identify well-characterised tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) possess limited capacity to address the causation of symptoms associated with poorly characterised tick-related illnesses, such as debilitating symptom complexes attributed to ticks (DSCATT) in Australia. Identification of local signals in tick-bitten skin that can be detected systemically in blood would have both clinical (diagnostic or prognostic) and research (mechanistic insight) utility, as a blood sample is more readily obtainable than tissue biopsies. We hypothesised that blood samples may reveal signals which reflect relevant local (tissue) events and that the time course of these signals may align with local pathophysiology. As a first step towards testing this hypothesis, we compared molecular signatures in skin biopsies taken from the tick-bite location of human participants, as published in our previous study, together with peripheral blood signatures obtained concurrently. This approach captures differentially expressed molecules across multiple omics datasets derived from peripheral blood (including cellular and cell-free transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, and DNA methylation), and skin biopsies (spatial transcriptomics). Our original data revealed that extracellular matrix organisation and platelet degranulation pathways were upregulated in the skin within 72 h of a tick bite. The same signals appeared in blood, where they then remained elevated for three months, displaying longitudinally consistent alterations of biological functions. Despite the limited sample size, these data represent proof-of-concept that molecular events in the skin following a tick bite can be detectable systemically. This underscores the potential value of blood samples, akin to a liquid biopsy, to capture biomarkers reflecting local tissue processes.
AB - Tick bites and tick-related diseases are on the rise. Diagnostic tests that identify well-characterised tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) possess limited capacity to address the causation of symptoms associated with poorly characterised tick-related illnesses, such as debilitating symptom complexes attributed to ticks (DSCATT) in Australia. Identification of local signals in tick-bitten skin that can be detected systemically in blood would have both clinical (diagnostic or prognostic) and research (mechanistic insight) utility, as a blood sample is more readily obtainable than tissue biopsies. We hypothesised that blood samples may reveal signals which reflect relevant local (tissue) events and that the time course of these signals may align with local pathophysiology. As a first step towards testing this hypothesis, we compared molecular signatures in skin biopsies taken from the tick-bite location of human participants, as published in our previous study, together with peripheral blood signatures obtained concurrently. This approach captures differentially expressed molecules across multiple omics datasets derived from peripheral blood (including cellular and cell-free transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, and DNA methylation), and skin biopsies (spatial transcriptomics). Our original data revealed that extracellular matrix organisation and platelet degranulation pathways were upregulated in the skin within 72 h of a tick bite. The same signals appeared in blood, where they then remained elevated for three months, displaying longitudinally consistent alterations of biological functions. Despite the limited sample size, these data represent proof-of-concept that molecular events in the skin following a tick bite can be detectable systemically. This underscores the potential value of blood samples, akin to a liquid biopsy, to capture biomarkers reflecting local tissue processes.
KW - emerging diseases
KW - MULTI-OMICS
KW - systems biology
KW - tick-borne diseases
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85219187106&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/ijms26041520
DO - 10.3390/ijms26041520
M3 - Article
C2 - 40003986
AN - SCOPUS:85219187106
SN - 1661-6596
VL - 26
SP - 1
EP - 24
JO - International Journal of Molecular Sciences
JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences
IS - 4
M1 - 1520
ER -