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Louise Royle

Researcher at University College Dublin

Publications -  97
Citations -  7170

Louise Royle is an academic researcher from University College Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Glycan & Glycosylation. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 97 publications receiving 6672 citations. Previous affiliations of Louise Royle include University of Oxford.

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HPLC-based analysis of serum N-glycans on a 96-well plate platform with dedicated database software.

TL;DR: A robust, fully automatable technology platform that includes computer software for the detailed analysis of low femtomoles of N-linked sugars released from glycoproteins is presented, allowing optimization of production conditions and its application to rheumatoid arthritis is demonstrated.
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Ovarian Cancer is Associated With Changes in Glycosylation in Both Acute-Phase Proteins and IgG

TL;DR: There was some preliminary indication that combinations of changes in the serum glycome might improve the separation of ovarian cancer and benign tumors; however, a larger study using data receiver operating characteristic curves will be required to draw any firm conclusions.
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Altered glycosylation pattern allows the distinction between prostate-specific antigen (PSA) from normal and tumor origins.

TL;DR: In this paper, N-glycan characterization of PSA from seminal fluid and prostate cancer cells (LNCaP cell line) by sequencing analysis and mass spectrometry was carried out.
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Secretory IgA N- and O-glycans provide a link between the innate and adaptive immune systems.

TL;DR: It is shown that the N-glycans on the H chains of both SIgA1 andSIgA2 present terminal GlcNAc and mannose residues that are normally masked by SC, but that can be unmasked and recognized byMannose-binding lectin, by disrupting the SC-H chain noncovalent interactions.
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GlycoBase and autoGU

TL;DR: A database (GlycoBase) and analytical tool (autoGU) to assist the interpretation and assignment of HPLC-glycan profiles to facilitate basic research as well as the quantitative high-throughput analysis of low concentrations of glycans released from glycoproteins.