Using the Ratio of Phosphorylated to Non-phosphorylated Forms of Stress Kinase PKR as a Potential Diagnostic Test for ME/CFS, 2025, Sweetman, Tate+

SNT Gatchaman

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Staff member
Using the Ratio of Phosphorylated to Non-phosphorylated Forms of Stress Kinase PKR as a Potential Diagnostic Test for ME/CFS
Sweetman, Eiren; Tate, Warren P.

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is a complex illness characterized by a set of mainly neurological symptoms lasting for over 6 months. Currently, there is no definitive laboratory diagnostic test readily accessible to all clinicians and patients, and so clinical diagnosis occurs only after an exhaustive process of exclusion of all other possible causes of the varied symptoms experienced by the patient.

Here we present the development of a method that uses specific antibodies able to identify a changed ratio of phosphorylated and active protein kinase R in the peripheral blood monocyte cells (PBMCs) and neutrophil cells from a small group of ME/CFS sufferers, compared to age and sex-matched controls. Protein kinase R (PKR) is an RNA-activated immune protein and stress kinase that has been observed to be present in its cleaved, auto-phosphorylated, and active form in past ME/CFS studies.

After further validation, the activation status of PKR detected via specific antibodies in an ELISA format has potential for a simple readily accessible diagnostic tool for the early acute stage of ME/CFS illness, or as a long-term measure to evaluate the disease status.

Link | PDF (SpringerLink) [Paywall]
 
PKR
PKR is a versatile protein kinase that plays a key role in the innate immune response to viral infection, as well as in cellular responses to various stressors. Its ability to regulate translation, induce apoptosis, and regulate inflammation makes it a target in research related to cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and metabolic disorders

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Exercise Performance Related to Immune Dysfunction. Nijs et al. 2005
That 2005 study found a relationship between PKR activity and work performance at RER=1 (ie close to VO2max)
 
Back
Top