| Literature DB >> 28296934 |
Eva Åström1, Per Stål2, Robin Zenlander2, Pia Edenvik2, Catharina Alexandersson3, Mats Haglund3, Ingvar Rydén4, Peter Påhlsson1.
Abstract
Altered fucosylation of glycoproteins is associated with development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Lectins have been commonly used to assay changes in fucosylation of plasma glycoproteins. In the present study a recombinantly engineered form of the fucose binding lectin Aleuria aurantia (AAL) consisting of a single binding site for fucose (S2), was used to construct a reverse lectin ELISA method. Microtiter plates coated with the S2 lectin were used to capture glycoproteins from plasma samples followed by antibody detection of S2-bound fucosylated α1-acid glycoprotein (S2-bound AGP). The method was used to compare the level of S2-bound AGP in serum samples from a small cohort of patients with hepatitis, cirrhosis or HCC. Using the reverse S2 lectin ELISA it was shown that the levels of S2-bound AGP was significantly higher in HCC patients compared to non-cancer patients and that there was also a significant elevation of S2-bound AGP in HCC patients compared to cirrhosis patients. There was no correlation between the level of S2-bound AGP and total AGP concentration. The performance of S2-bound AGP in differentiating HCC from cirrhosis samples or hepatitis samples were compared to other markers. A combination of S2-bound AGP, α-fetoprotein and AGP concentration showed performances giving area under receiver operating curves of 0.87 and 0.95 respectively.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28296934 PMCID: PMC5352000 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173897
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical features of patients used in the study.
| Disease diagnosis | HCC | Cirrhosis | Hepatitis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 28 | 32 | 32 |
| 4/50/18/21/7 | 0/28/16/19/37 | 59/41/0/0/0 | |
| Gender % (M/F) | 93/7 | 81/19 | 47/53 |
| Age (Mean) | 66.5 ± 10.1 | 62.1 ± 12.2 | 44.9 ± 9.8 |
| 5582 ± 19068 | 4 ± 3 | 6 ± 19 | |
| 1.0 ± 0.7 | 0.7 ± 0.3 | 0.7 ± 0.2 | |
| 7/32/11/46/4 | N/A | ||
| Child Pugh % (A/B/C) | 61/36/4 | 47/34/19 | N/A |
aSamples were provided coded from Karolinska University Hospital and the Infectious Disease Clinic at Kalmar County Hospital
bHCC diagnosis was determined according to the guidelines of EASL and AASLD for a cirrhotic liver. For non-cirrhotic livers HCC diagnosis was determined by liver biopsy. Cirrhosis was determined with Fibroscan (>Z14kPa) and ultrasound.
cPatients classified as HBV or HCV were defined as those with HBsAg positivity or HCV-RNA positivity but no evidence of cirrhosis
dEtiology: HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; ALC, alcohol induced liver disease; NAFLD, non-alcoholic liver disease, including NASH; Other, autoimmune hepatitis, cryptogenic liver disease, hemochromatosis, primary biliary cirrhosis and healthy livers
eAFP was determined using standard methods (COBAS, Roche Diagnostics)
fAGP concentrations were determined using standard methods (ProSpec, Siemens)
gHCC staging was determined using the Barcelona-Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) classification
hN/A, not available
Fig 1Western blot of AAL and S2 enriched α1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) from patient plasma samples.
Lanes 1–4 represent cirrhosis samples, lanes 5–8 HCC samples, lane 9 a hepatitis sample and lane 10 a normal plasma sample. AGP was detected using the anti-human AGP antibody 058.
Fig 2Pro-Q-Emerald 300 stained SDS-PAGE of purified AGP from a HCC plasma sample (lane 1), a cirrhosis plasma sample (lane 2) and a normal plasma sample.
Molecular weight markers are shown to the left.
Fig 3A. Binding of different concentrations of purified AGP from patient samples to S2 in the reverse S2 lectin ELISA. AGP purified from a patient with HCC (black triangles), AGP purified from a cirrhosis patient (black squares) and AGP purified from a normal sample (black circles). B. Comparison of binding of different concentrations of purified AGP from a HCC patient sample diluted in 1% BSA in PBS (circles) and diluted in normal serum (black squares). C. Binding of different concentrations of dsAGP to S2 in the reverse S2 lectin ELISA assay.
Fig 4Scatter plots of levels of S2-bound AGP (as μg/ml of dsAGP standard) (A), AGP (B), and AFP (C) in patients with hepatitis, cirrhosis and HCC.
Fig 5Correlation plot of levels of AGP and S2-bound AGP.
The r square value is 0.11.
Fig 6Scatter plots of bound fucosylated AGP in a traditional lectin ELISA (A) and in a reversed S2 lectin ELISA (B).
Fig 7ROC-analyses of S2-bound AGP, AFP and a combination of S2-bound AGP, AFP and AGP to differentiate HCC from hepatitis (panel A) and HCC from cirrhosis (panel B).
ROC-analysis (HCC vs. hepatitis and cirrhosis).
| Marker | Hepatitis vs. HCC | Cirrhosis vs. HCC |
|---|---|---|
| AUC (95% CI) | AUC (95% CI) | |
| AFP | 0.815 (0.699–0.93) | 0.77 (0.646–0.894) |
| AGP | 0.664 (0.522–0.806) | 0.653 (0.509–0.797) |
| S2-bound AGP | 0.941 (0.886–0.997) | 0.77 (0.644–0.893) |
| S2-bound AGP +AFP | 0.942 (0.887–0.997) | 0.826 (0.713–0.939) |
| S2-bound AGP + AGP | 0.949 (0.893–1.000) | 0.816 (0.706–0.926) |
| S2-bound AGP + AFP + AGP | 0.952 (0.896–1.000) | 0.864 (0.769–0.959) |
AUC, area under the curve; CI, confidence interval