| Literature DB >> 26739145 |
Monique Van Scherpenzeel1,2, Esther Willems1,2, Dirk J Lefeber3,4.
Abstract
Abnormal protein glycosylation is observed in many common disorders like cancer, inflammation, Alzheimer's disease and diabetes. However, the actual use of this information in clinical diagnostics is still very limited. Information is usually derived from analysis of total serum N-glycan profiling methods, whereas the current use of glycoprotein biomarkers in the clinical setting is commonly based on protein levels. It can be envisioned that combining protein levels and their glycan isoforms would increase specificity for early diagnosis and therapy monitoring. To establish diagnostic assays, based on the mass spectrometric analysis of protein-specific glycosylation abnormalities, still many technical improvements have to be made. In addition, clinical validation is equally important as well as an understanding of the genetic and environmental factors that determine the protein-specific glycosylation abnormalities. Important lessons can be learned from the group of monogenic disorders in the glycosylation pathway, the Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation (CDG). Now that more and more genetic defects are being unraveled, we start to learn how genetic factors influence glycomics profiles of individual and total serum proteins. Although only in its initial stages, such studies suggest the importance to establish diagnostic assays for protein-specific glycosylation profiling, and the need to look beyond the single glycoprotein diagnostic test. Here, we review progress in and lessons from genetic disease, and review the increasing opportunities of mass spectrometry to analyze protein glycosylation in the clinical diagnostic setting. Furthermore, we will discuss the possibilities to expand current CDG diagnostics and how this can be used to approach glycoprotein biomarkers for more common diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Congenital disorders of glycosylation; Glycomics; Protein-specific glycosylation; Transferrin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26739145 PMCID: PMC4891361 DOI: 10.1007/s10719-015-9639-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glycoconj J ISSN: 0282-0080 Impact factor: 2.916
Fig. 1Serum transferrin isoelectric focusing (TIEF) gels with the number of terminal sialic acid residues indicated at the left and right side (0 to 5). Lanes 1 and 3: normal pattern; lane 2: CDG-I pattern (elevated asialo- and disialotransferrin bands); lanes 4, 5, 7 and 8: CDG-II pattern (additional increase of monosialo- and trisialotransferrin bands). Lane 6: mild CDG-I profile, resembles mild CDG-II pattern. Lane 7: combined CDG-I and -II profile. Lanes 8 to 11: transferrin before and after neuraminidase treatment (+n) for CDG-II defect MAN1B1-CDG and a polymorphism of transferrin, respectively. Two bands instead of one band will become visible when treating a transferrin polymorphism with neuraminidase
Fig. 2Effects of Dietary Galactose on Glycosylation. High resolution mass spectrometry showing glycan structures of transferrin before (a) and after (b) 2 weeks intake of supplementary galactose and corresponding patterns of transferrin isoelectric focusing (IEF). The protein backbone is symbolized by a brown horizontal line. The unoccupied positions are indicated by open arrows () and define the CDG-I-component of this phenotype. The yellow arrow () demonstrates the absence of galactose on one of the truncated glycans, which define the CDG type-II component. The number of sialic acids is indicated above each structure, and the insets at the right show respective IEF results
Overview of some key examples of serum glycoprotein biomarkers from recent literature for diseases that present with altered glycoprotein levels and glycosylation abnormalities
| Glycoprotein Biomarker | Disease | Detection on protein levels or altered glycoforms | Detection technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transferrina | – CDG | – Glycosylation abnormalities | – IEF, QTOF | [ |
| – Sepsis | – Decrease in sialylation | – ELLA | [ | |
| – Acute pancreatitis | – Increased fucosylation | – LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| – Ovarian cancer | – Increase of concentration | – ELISA | [ | |
| α1-antitrypsin | – CDG | – Altered glycosylation | – 2DE | [ |
| – Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) | – Decreased concentration | – ELISA | [ | |
| – Liver cirrhosis and liver cancer | – Core and outer arm fucosylation | – 2DE, MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| – Lung cancer | – Altered glycosylation | – Lectin microarray, ELISA | [ | |
| Haptoglobin | – CDG | – Altered glycosylation | – 2DE | [ |
| – Long cancer | – sLeX increase | – HILIC, WAX-HPLC | [ | |
| – Acute phase ovarian cancer | – sLeX increase | – 2DE, NP-HPLC | [ | |
| – Stomach cancer | – sLeX increase | – 2DE, LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| – Pancreatic cancer | – Fucosylation | – MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| – Rheumatoid arthritis | – Reduced mannosylation | – 2DE, MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| – Pancreatic cancer | – Changes in sialylation | – LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| – Gastric cancer | – Increase of concentration | – ELISA | [ | |
| Fetuin | – Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | – Fucosylation | – LC-MS/MS | [ |
| – Chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer | – sLeX increase | – 2DE, WAX-HPLC, NP-HPLC, LC-MS/MS, MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| α-1-acid glycoprotein | – CDG | – Altered glycosylation | – 2DE | [ |
| – Acute phase ovarian cancer | – sLeX increase | – 2DE, NP-HPLC | [ | |
| – Chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer | – Increased branching and sLeX | – 2DE, WAX-HPLC, NP-HPLC, LC-MS/MS, MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| – Rheumatoid arthritis | – Altered mannosylation | – 2DE, MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| Immunoglobulin G (IgG) | – Acute phase ovarian cancer | – sLeX increase | – 2DE, NP-HPLC | [ |
| – Advanced ovarian cancer | – Reduced galactosylation and sialylation levels | – 2DE, NP-HPLC | [ | |
| – Stomach cancer | – Core fucosylation | – 2DE, LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| α1-antichymotrypsin | – Acute phase ovarian cancer | – sLeX increase | – 2DE, NP-HPLC | [ |
| – Alzheimer’s disease | – Concentration | – Immunoassay | [ | |
| α2-macroglobulin | – Sjögren’s syndrome | Abnormal glycosylation | Immunoblot | [ |
| α-fetoproteina | – Liver diseases | – Core fucosylation, concentration | – 2DE, immunoblot | [ |
| – Liver cancera | – Concentration | – Anti-body (liquid phase binding assay) | [ | |
| des-γ-carboxypro-thrombin | Liver diseases, liver cancer | Core fucosylation | – 2DE, immunoblot | [ |
| Ferritin | Still’s disease, hemophagocytic syndrome | Altered glycosylation | Immunoassay | [ |
| Ceruloplasmin | – CDG | – Low levels, glycosylation abnormalities | – 2DE | [ |
| – Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | – Upregulated, core fucosylation | – LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| – Pancreatic cancer | – sLeX increase | – LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| Thyroglobulina | – CDG | – Low levels, glycosylation abnormalities | – 2DE | [ |
| – Thyroid cancer | – Increase of concentration | – Immunoassay | [ | |
| Thyrotropin, Thyroid stimulating hormone | – CDG | – Low levels, altered glycosylation | – IEF, serum levels | [ |
| – Thyroid function | – Increase of glycoprotein concentration | – Immunoassay | [ | |
| Hemopexin | Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Fucosylation | – LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Clusterin | – Stomach cancer | – Smaller N-glycans | – 2DE, LC-MS/MS | [ |
| – Gastric cancer | – Decrease of concentration | – ELISA | [ | |
| – Clear cell renal cell carcinoma | – Decreased (core fucosylated) biantannary glycans | – SDS-PAGE, LC-MS/MS | [ | |
| Leucine rich-α2-glycoprotein | Stomach cancer | Upregulation, altered glycosylation | 2DE, LC-MS/MS | [ |
| α-dystroglycan | Walker-Warburg syndrome | Hypoglycosylation | Immunoassay | [ |
| Kininogen | – Colorectal cancer (CRC) | – Elevated sialylation and fucosylation | – LC-MS/MS | [ |
| – Colorectal cancer (CRC) | – Increase of concentration | – MALDI-TOF | [ | |
| Kallistatin | Liver cirrhosis | Increase of concentration | ELISA | [ |
| Afamin | – Metabolic syndrome | – Increase of concentration | – ELISA | [ |
| – Gastric cancer | – Decrease of concentration | – ELISA | [ | |
| Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)a | Prostate cancer | Increase of concentration | Immunoassay | [ |
| Human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) | – Ovarian tumors | Increase of concentration | Immunoassay | [ |
| Apolipoprotein (A-1)a | Ovarian cancer | Decrease of concentration | ELISA | [ |
| Transthyretin, prealbumina | Ovarian cancer | Decrease of concentration | ELISA | [ |
| β2-microglobulina | Ovarian cancer | Increase of concentration | ELISA | [ |
| Cancer antigen 125 (CA125) or MUC16a | Ovarian cancer | Increase of concentration | ELISA | [ |
| Carbohydrate antigen 19–9 (CA19-9)a | – Pancreatic cancer Ovarian cancer | sLea on mucin glycoproteins | ELISA | [ |
| Cancer antigen 15–3 (CA15-3)a | Breast cancer | Sialylated O-linked oligosaccharide on MUC1 | ELISA | [ |
| CA27-29a (MUC1) | Breast cancer | Protein concentration | ELISA | [ |
2DE 2D-electrophoresis; ELLA enzyme-linked lectin assay; FLISA Lectin-Fluorophore-linked Immunosorbent Assay; HILIC Hydrophilic Interaction Liquid Chromatography; sLe Sialyl Lewis A structures; sLe Sialyl Lewis X structures; WAX-HPLC weak anion exchange high performance liquid chromatography
aFDA approved
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the different types of glycoprotein analysis using mass spectrometry