| Literature DB >> 25347993 |
Yiqian Liang1, Tianran Ma2, Asmitananda Thakur1, Hanjie Yu2, Lei Gao1, Puyu Shi1, Xuetian Li2, Hui Ren1, Liyuan Jia2, Shuo Zhang1, Zheng Li3, Mingwei Chen4.
Abstract
Lung cancer is the most common malignancy worldwide. Thus, there is a critical need for diagnostic biomarkers with adequate sensitivity and specificity for lung cancer detection. Glycans in glycoproteins are significantly altered in cancer, and may serve as a tool for identifying potential diagnostic biomarkers. Recent studies have reported changes in α-1-antitrypsin (A1AT) glycosylation in lung cancer serum, tissue and cell lines. In this study, a lectin microarray was used to detect glycosylation changes in serum A1AT from patients with lung adenocarcinoma (ADC), squamous cell lung cancer, small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) and benign pulmonary diseases. Differentially expressed glycosylated patterns of A1AT were identified by lectin arrays and were confirmed by lectin-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). We found that galactosylated A1AT could distinguish non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) from benign pulmonary diseases (AUC = 0.834); fucosylated A1AT showed exceptional capability in distinguishing ADC from benign diseases (AUC = 0.919) or other lung cancer subtypes (AUC = 0.844), and A1AT containing poly-LacNAc could detect SCLC from benign diseases (AUC = 0.905) or NSCLC (AUC = 0.707). The present study indicates that glycosylated patterns of A1AT may serve as potential biomarkers for detection of lung cancer. Further studies in larger sample sizes are necessary to validate the clinical utility of these markers.Entities:
Keywords: glycosylation; lectin microarray; lectin-based ELISA; lung cancer; α-1-antitrypsin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25347993 DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cwu115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glycobiology ISSN: 0959-6658 Impact factor: 4.313