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Showing papers on "Glycome published in 2016"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Glycans are involved in virtually all physiological processes, and inter-individual variation in glycome composition is large, and these differences associate with disease risk, disease course and the response to therapy.

166 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review includes a brief tutorial on human glycobiology and a limited number of specific examples of glycan‐binding protein‐glycan interactions that initiate and regulate inflammation.
Abstract: Glycans and complementary glycan-binding proteins are essential components in the language of cell-cell interactions in immunity. The study of glycan function is the purview of glycobiology, which has often been presented as an unusually complex discipline. In fact, the human glycome, composed of all of its glycans, is built primarily from only 9 building blocks that are combined by enzymes (writers) with specific and limited biosynthetic capabilities into a tractable and increasingly accessible number of potential glycan patterns that are functionally read by several dozen human glycan-binding proteins (readers). Nowhere is the importance of glycan recognition better understood than in infection and immunity, and knowledge in this area has already led to glycan mimetic anti-infective and anti-inflammatory drugs. This review includes a brief tutorial on human glycobiology and a limited number of specific examples of glycan-binding protein-glycan interactions that initiate and regulate inflammation. Examples include representatives from different glycan-binding protein families, including the C-type lectins (E-selectin, P-selectin, dectin-1, and dectin-2), sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectins (sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectins 8 and 9), galectins (galectin-1, galectin-3, and galectin-9), as well as hyaluronic acid-binding proteins. As glycoscience technologies advance, opportunities for enhanced understanding of glycans and their roles in leukocyte cell biology provide increasing opportunities for discovery and therapeutic intervention.

106 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Considering the functional relevance of IgG glycosylation for both tumor immunosurveillance and clinical efficacy of therapy with mAbs, individual variation in IgG sugars may turn out to be important for prediction of disease course or the choice of therapy, thus warranting further, more detailed studies of Igg glyCosylation in colorectal cancer.
Abstract: Purpose: Alternative glycosylation has significant structural and functional consequences on IgG and consequently also on cancer immunosurveillance. Because of technological limitations, the effects of highly heritable individual variations and the differences in the dynamics of changes in IgG glycosylation on colorectal cancer were never investigated before. Experimental Design: Using recently developed high-throughput UPLC technology for IgG glycosylation analysis, we analyzed IgG glycome composition in 760 patients with colorectal cancer and 538 matching controls. Effects of surgery were evaluated in 28 patients sampled before and three times after surgery. A predictive model was built using regularized logistic regression and evaluated using a 10-cross validation procedure. Furthermore, IgG glycome composition was analyzed in 39 plasma samples collected before initial diagnosis of colorectal cancer. Results: We have found that colorectal cancer associates with decrease in IgG galactosylation, IgG sialylation and increase in core-fucosylation of neutral glycans with concurrent decrease of core-fucosylation of sialylated glycans. Although a model based on age and sex did not show discriminative power (AUC = 0.499), the addition of glycan variables into the model considerably increased the discriminative power of the model (AUC = 0.755). However, none of these differences were significant in the small set of samples collected before the initial diagnosis. Conclusions: Considering the functional relevance of IgG glycosylation for both tumor immunosurveillance and clinical efficacy of therapy with mAbs, individual variation in IgG glycosylation may turn out to be important for prediction of disease course or the choice of therapy, thus warranting further, more detailed studies of IgG glycosylation in colorectal cancer. Clin Cancer Res; 1–9. ©2016 AACR .

102 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: GALA illustrates how membrane trafficking in the secretory pathway can regulate protein glycosylation and thus encode information in the glycome, and is named after the re-compartmentation process the GALA pathway.

86 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The emerging evidence for the concept of a network calls for a detailed fingerprinting of glycans, and the validity of extrapolations between different organisms of the phylogenetic tree yet is inevitably limited.
Abstract: Carbohydrates establish the third alphabet of life. As part of cellular glycoconjugates, the glycans generate a multitude of signals in a minimum of space. The presence of distinct glycotopes and the glycome diversity are mapped by sugar receptors (antibodies and lectins). Endogenous (tissue) lectins can read the sugar-encoded information and translate it into functional aspects of cell sociology. Illustrated by instructive examples, each glycan has its own ligand properties. Lectins with different folds can converge to target the same epitope, while intrafamily diversification enables functional cooperation and antagonism. The emerging evidence for the concept of a network calls for a detailed fingerprinting. Due to the high degree of plasticity and dynamics of the display of genes for lectins the validity of extrapolations between different organisms of the phylogenetic tree yet is inevitably limited.

73 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Cellular O-Glycome Reporter/Amplification (CORA) method as mentioned in this paper is a sensitive method used to amplify and profile mucin-type O-glycans synthesized by living cells.
Abstract: Protein O-glycosylation has key roles in many biological processes, but the repertoire of O-glycans synthesized by cells is difficult to determine. Here we describe an approach termed Cellular O-Glycome Reporter/Amplification (CORA), a sensitive method used to amplify and profile mucin-type O-glycans synthesized by living cells. Cells convert added peracetylated benzyl-α-N-acetylgalactosamine to a large variety of modified O-glycan derivatives that are secreted from cells, allowing for easy purification for analysis by HPLC and mass spectrometry (MS). Relative to conventional O-glycan analyses, CORA resulted in an ∼100-1,000-fold increase in sensitivity and identified a more complex repertoire of O-glycans in more than a dozen cell types from Homo sapiens and Mus musculus. Furthermore, when coupled with computational modeling, CORA can be used for predictions about the diversity of the human O-glycome and offers new opportunities to identify novel glycan biomarkers for human diseases.

72 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Immunohistochemical analysis substantiated that Galectin-1 upregulation is associated with osteoarthritic cartilage and subchondral bone histopathology and severity of degeneration, and identifies GalectIn-1 as a master regulator of clinically relevant inflammatory-response genes, working via NF-κB.
Abstract: Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease that ranks among the leading causes of adult disability. Mechanisms underlying osteoarthritis pathogenesis are not yet fully elucidated, putting limits to current disease management and treatment. Based on the phenomenological evidence for dysregulation within the glycome of chondrocytes and the network of a family of adhesion/growth-regulatory lectins, that is, galectins, we tested the hypothesis that Galectin-1 is relevant for causing degeneration. Immunohistochemical analysis substantiated that Galectin-1 upregulation is associated with osteoarthritic cartilage and subchondral bone histopathology and severity of degeneration (p < 0.0001, n = 29 patients). In vitro, the lectin was secreted and it bound to osteoarthritic chondrocytes inhibitable by cognate sugar. Glycan-dependent Galectin-1 binding induced a set of disease markers, including matrix metalloproteinases and activated NF-κB, hereby switching on an inflammatory gene signature (p < 10(-16)). Inhibition of distinct components of the NF-κB pathway using dedicated inhibitors led to dose-dependent impairment of Galectin-1-mediated transcriptional activation. Enhanced secretion of effectors of degeneration such as three matrix metalloproteinases underscores the data's pathophysiological relevance. This study thus identifies Galectin-1 as a master regulator of clinically relevant inflammatory-response genes, working via NF-κB. Because inflammation is critical to cartilage degeneration in osteoarthritis, this report reveals an intimate relation of glycobiology to osteoarthritic cartilage degeneration.

71 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A number of primary studies carried out over the past decade have turned up specific and valuable clues regarding the composition and roles of glycan structures and also glycan binding proteins involved EV biogenesis and transfer.
Abstract: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a diverse population of complex biological particles with diameters ranging from approximately 20 to 1000 nm. Tremendous interest in EVs has been generated following a number of recent, high-profile reports describing their potential utility in diagnostic, prognostic, drug delivery, and therapeutic roles. Subpopulations, such as exosomes, are now known to directly participate in cell–cell communication and direct material transfer. Glycomics, the ‘omic’ portion of the glycobiology field, has only begun to catalog the surface oligosaccharide and polysaccharide structures and also the carbohydrate-binding proteins found on and inside EVs. The EV glycome undoubtedly contains vital clues essential to better understanding the function, biogenesis, release and transfer of vesicles, however getting at this information is technically challenging and made even more so because of the small physical size of the vesicles and the typically minute yield from physiological-scale biological samples. Vesicle micro-heterogeneity which may be related to specific vesicle origins and functions presents a further challenge. A number of primary studies carried out over the past decade have turned up specific and valuable clues regarding the composition and roles of glycan structures and also glycan binding proteins involved EV biogenesis and transfer. This review explores some of the major EV glycobiological research carried out to date and discusses the potential implications of these findings across the life sciences.

66 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present preliminary trials suggest that large-scale serum glycomics cohort by means of various-types of human AD patients as well as the normal control sera can facilitate the discovery research of highly sensitive and reliable serum biomarkers for an early diagnosis of AD.

65 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new high-throughput workflow allowed the identification of novel plasma glycosylation changes with pregnancy, and a difference in the recovery speed after delivery was observed for α2,3- andα2,6-linked sialic acid linkages of triantennary glycans.
Abstract: Pregnancy requires partial suppression of the immune system to ensure maternal-foetal tolerance. Protein glycosylation, and especially terminal sialic acid linkages, are of prime importance in regulating the pro- and anti-inflammatory immune responses. However, little is known about pregnancy-associated changes of the serum N-glycome and sialic acid linkages. Using a combination of recently developed methods, i.e. derivatisation that allows the distinction between α2,3- and α2,6-linked sialic acids by high-throughput MALDI-TOF-MS and software-assisted data processing, we analysed the serum N-glycome of a cohort of 29 healthy women at 6 time points during and after pregnancy. A total of 77 N-glycans were followed over time, confirming in part previous findings while also revealing novel associations (e.g. an increase of FA2BG1S1(6), FA2G1S1(6) and A2BG2S2(6) with delivery). From the individual glycans we calculated 42 derived traits. With these, an increase during pregnancy and decrease after delivery was observed for both α2,3- and α2,6-linked sialylation. Additionally, a difference in the recovery speed after delivery was observed for α2,3- and α2,6-linked sialylation of triantennary glycans. In conclusion, our new high-throughput workflow allowed the identification of novel plasma glycosylation changes with pregnancy.

50 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 3D structure generation technique, called computational carbohydrate grafting, is combined with the wealth of specificity information available from glycan array screening to provide a structural rationalization for the binding specificity of >90% of 1223 arrayed glycans.
Abstract: Defining how a glycan-binding protein (GBP) specifically selects its cognate glycan from among the ensemble of glycans within the cellular glycome is an area of intense study. Powerful insight into recognition mechanisms can be gained from 3D structures of GBPs complexed to glycans; however, such structures remain difficult to obtain experimentally. Here an automated 3D structure generation technique, called computational carbohydrate grafting, is combined with the wealth of specificity information available from glycan array screening. Integration of the array data with modeling and crystallography allows generation of putative co-complex structures that can be objectively assessed and iteratively altered until a high level of agreement with experiment is achieved. Given an accurate model of the co-complexes, grafting is also able to discern which binding determinants are active when multiple potential determinants are present within a glycan. In some cases, induced fit in the protein or glycan was necessary to explain the observed specificity, while in other examples a revised definition of the minimal binding determinants was required. When applied to a collection of 10 GBP-glycan complexes, for which crystallographic and array data have been reported, grafting provided a structural rationalization for the binding specificity of >90% of 1223 arrayed glycans. A webtool that enables researchers to perform computational carbohydrate grafting is available at www.glycam.org/gr (accessed 03 March 2016).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review places special emphasis on China, where scientists have made sizeable contributions to the literature, as advancements in glycoproteomics and glycomincs are occurring quite rapidly.
Abstract: Protein N-glycosylation plays a crucial role in a considerable number of important biological processes. Research studies on glycoproteomes and glycomes have already characterized many glycoproteins and glycans associated with cell development, life cycle, and disease progression. Mass spectrometry (MS) is the most powerful tool for identifying biomolecules including glycoproteins and glycans, however, utilizing MS-based approaches to identify glycoproteomes and glycomes is challenging due to the technical difficulties associated with glycosylation analysis. In this review, we summarize the most recent developments in MS-based glycoproteomics and glycomics, including a discussion on the development of analytical methodologies and strategies used to explore the glycoproteome and glycome, as well as noteworthy biological discoveries made in glycoproteome and glycome research. This review places special emphasis on China, where scientists have made sizeable contributions to the literature, as advancements in glycoproteomics and glycomincs are occurring quite rapidly.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: High abundance of simple monoantennary glycan structures were associated with increased survival, particularly in the basal‐like subgroup, and the presence of circulating tumour cells was found to be significantly associated with several serum glycome structures like bi and triantennaries, di and trigalactosylated, di‐ and trisialylated.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings demonstrate no association between serum IgG glycome composition and allergic diseases in children, nor children sensitized to individual allergen mean wheal diameter or positive wheal sum values.
Abstract: It is speculated that immunoglobulin G (IgG) plays a regulatory role in allergic reactions. The glycans on the Fc region are known to affect IgG effector functions, thereby possibly having a role in IgG modulation of allergic response. This is the first study investigating patients’ IgG glycosylation profile in allergic diseases. Subclass specific IgG glycosylation profile was analyzed in two cohorts of allergen sensitized and non-sensitized 3- to 11-year-old children (conducted at University of Aberdeen, UK and Children’s Hospital Srebrnjak, Zagreb, Croatia) with 893 subjects in total. IgG was isolated from serum/plasma by affinity chromatography on Protein G. IgG tryptic glycopeptides were analyzed by liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. In the Zagreb cohort IgG glycome composition changed with age across all IgG subclasses. In both cohorts, IgG glycome composition did not differ in allergen sensitized subjects, nor children sensitized to individual allergens, single allergen mean wheal diameter or positive wheal sum values. In the Zagreb study the results were also replicated for high total serum IgE and in children with self-reported manifest allergic disease. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate no association between serum IgG glycome composition and allergic diseases in children.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study is the first to provide precise structural information on how host N-glycans are altered to support S. typhimurium invasion and developed a novel assay to measure membrane glycoprotein turnover rates, which revealed that glycan modifications occur by bacterial enzyme activity rather than by host-derived restructuring strategies.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this work, serum glycoproteins, depleted from albumin and IgG, were separated by 2DE and protein spots of acute‐phase proteins were identified by peptide mapping and their corresponding glycan moieties were released enzymatically, fluorescently labeled and analyzed by CE‐LIF.
Abstract: Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most frequent cause of death from all gynecological malignancies because of its late diagnosis. As N-glycosylation is modified in the course of ovarian cancer, it is a promising source of tumor biomarkers. In this work, serum glycoproteins, depleted from albumin and IgG, were separated by 2DE. Protein spots of acute-phase proteins were identified by peptide mapping and their corresponding glycan moieties were released enzymatically, fluorescently labeled and analyzed by CE-LIF. In the positive acute-phase proteins, haptoglobin, α1-antitrypsin, and α1-antichymotrypsin, an increase of antennarity and Lewis(X) motif could be measured in EOC patients on tri- and/or tetraantennary N-glycans. Tetraantennary N-glycans containing three Lewis(X) epitopes and triantennary N-glycans containing a β(1-6) branch and a Lewis(X) epitope were only present in EOC patients. We also showed for the first time that the core-fucosylated biantennary digalactosylated N-glycan of α1-acid glycoprotein is a potential biomarker for EOC. To conclude, core-fucosylated biantennary N-glycans on α1-acid glycoprotein as well as higher antennarity and increased amounts of Lewis(X) motif on haptoglobin, α1-antitrypsin, and α1-antichymotrypsin are promising biomarkers for EOC. Nevertheless, their specificity and selectivity for the early detection of EOC should be evaluated in a larger study.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The capability of UniCarbKB to store and query relative glycan abundance data and the efforts to improve the efficient representation of disease terms and associated changes in glycan heterogeneity by integrating the Disease Ontology are demonstrated.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study demonstrated the difficulty of carrying out a complete analysis of the glycome in crude samples by any single technology and the importance of rigorous optimization of the course of analysis from preprocessing to data interpretation and suggests that another collaborative study employing the latest technologies in this rapidly evolving field will help to realize the requirements of carryingout the large-scale analysis of glycoproteins in complex cell samples.
Abstract: The Human Disease Glycomics/Proteome Initiative (HGPI) is an activity in the Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) supported by leading researchers from international institutes and aims at development of disease-related glycomics/glycoproteomics analysis techniques. Since 2004, the initiative has conducted three pilot studies. The first two were N- and O-glycan analyses of purified transferrin and immunoglobulin-G and assessed the most appropriate analytical approach employed at the time. This paper describes the third study, which was conducted to compare different approaches for quantitation of N- and O-linked glycans attached to proteins in crude biological samples. The preliminary analysis on cell pellets resulted in wildly varied glycan profiles, which was probably the consequence of variations in the pre-processing sample preparation methodologies. However, the reproducibility of the data was not improved dramatically in the subsequent analysis on cell lysate fractions prepared in a specified method by one lab. The study demonstrated the difficulty of carrying out a complete analysis of the glycome in crude samples by any single technology and the importance of rigorous optimization of the course of analysis from preprocessing to data interpretation. It suggests that another collaborative study employing the latest technologies in this rapidly evolving field will help to realize the requirements of carrying out the large-scale analysis of glycoproteins in complex cell samples.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Total serum glycomics of STAM mouse were unveiled as an initial step to identify novel biomarkers of liver diseases, with which several glycans with expression significantly increased or decreased expression were identified.
Abstract: Model mice are frequently used in drug discovery research. Knowledge of similarities and differences between the mouse and human glycomes is critical when model mice are used for the discovery of glycan-related biomarkers and targets for therapeutic intervention. Since few comparative glycomic studies between human and mouse have been conducted, we performed a comprehensive comparison of the major classes of glycans in human and mouse sera using mass spectrometric and liquid chromatographic analyses. Up to 131 serum glycans, including N-glycans, free oligosaccharides (fOSs), glycosaminoglycans, O-glycans, and glycosphingolipid (GSL)-glycans, were quantified. In both serum samples, N-glycans were the most abundant in the total serum glycome, while fOSs were the least abundant. As expected, the diversity of sialic acid (i.e. Neu5Ac vs. Neu5Gc) was the major species difference between human and mouse in terms of N- and O-glycosylation, while GSL-glycomic profiles were completely different, even when the sialic acid diversity was taken into consideration. Furthermore, total serum glycomics of STAM mouse were unveiled as an initial step to identify novel biomarkers of liver diseases, with which we could identify several glycans with expression significantly increased or decreased expression.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Exact knowledge of the glycome of T. suis will facilitate more targeted studies on glycan receptors in the host as well as the engineering of cell lines to produce correctly glycosylated recombinant forms of candidate proteins for future studies on immunomodulation.
Abstract: Trichuris suis, a nematode parasite of pigs, has attracted attention as its eggs have been administered to human patients as a potential therapy for inflammatory diseases. The immunomodulatory factors remain molecularly uncharacterised, but in vitro studies suggest that glycans on the parasite's excretory/secretory proteins may play a role. Using an off-line LC-MS approach in combination with chemical and enzymatic treatments, we have examined the N-linked oligosaccharides of T. suis. In addition to the paucimannosidic and oligomannosidic N-glycans typical of many invertebrates, a number of glycans carry N,N'-diacetyllactosamine (LacdiNAc) modified by fucose and/or phosphorylcholine. Such antennal epitopes are similar to ones previously associated with immunomodulation by helminths; here we propose phosphorylcholine modifications predominantly of terminal N-acetylgalactosamine but also of subterminal α1,3-fucosylated N-acetylglucosamine. Exact knowledge of the glycome of T. suis will facilitate more targeted studies on glycan receptors in the host as well as the engineering of cell lines to produce correctly glycosylated recombinant forms of candidate proteins for future studies on immunomodulation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Tumor, kidney, and liver showed significant contrast, and several other tissues, including the pancreas, spleen, heart, and intestines, showed a very high contrast (>10‐fold), which has the potential to enable the rapid and non‐invasive magnetic resonance imaging of glycosylated tissues in vivo in preclinical models of disease.
Abstract: Glycosylation is a ubiquitous post-translational modification, present in over 50% of the proteins in the human genome, with important roles in cell-cell communication and migration. Interest in glycome profiling has increased with the realization that glycans can be used as biomarkers of many diseases, including cancer. We report here the first tomographic imaging of glycosylated tissues in live mice by using metabolic labeling and a gadolinium-based bioorthogonal MRI probe. Significant N-azidoacetylgalactosamine dependent T1 contrast was observed in vivo two hours after probe administration. Tumor, kidney, and liver showed significant contrast, and several other tissues, including the pancreas, spleen, heart, and intestines, showed a very high contrast (>10-fold). This approach has the potential to enable the rapid and non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging of glycosylated tissues in vivo in preclinical models of disease.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Improvements to the permethylation and subsequent liquid/liquid extraction stages provided herein enhance reproducibility and overall yield by facilitating minimal exposure of permethylated glycans to alkaline aqueous conditions.
Abstract: Synthesized in a non-template-driven process by enzymes called glycosyltransferases, glycans are key players in various significant intra- and extracellular events. Many pathological conditions, notably cancer, affect gene expression, which can in turn deregulate the relative abundance and activity levels of glycoside hydrolase and glycosyltransferase enzymes. Unique aberrant whole glycans resulting from deregulated glycosyltransferase(s) are often present in trace quantities within complex biofluids, making their detection difficult and sometimes stochastic. However, with proper sample preparation, one of the oldest forms of mass spectrometry (gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, GC-MS) can routinely detect the collection of branch-point and linkage-specific monosaccharides ("glycan nodes") present in complex biofluids. Complementary to traditional top-down glycomics techniques, the approach discussed herein involves the collection and condensation of each constituent glycan node in a sample into a single independent analytical signal, which provides detailed structural and quantitative information about changes to the glycome as a whole and reveals potentially deregulated glycosyltransferases. Improvements to the permethylation and subsequent liquid/liquid extraction stages provided herein enhance reproducibility and overall yield by facilitating minimal exposure of permethylated glycans to alkaline aqueous conditions. Modifications to the acetylation stage further increase the extent of reaction and overall yield. Despite their reproducibility, the overall yields of N-acetylhexosamine (HexNAc) partially permethylated alditol acetates (PMAAs) are shown to be inherently lower than their expected theoretical value relative to hexose PMAAs. Calculating the ratio of the area under the extracted ion chromatogram (XIC) for each individual hexose PMAA (or HexNAc PMAA) to the sum of such XIC areas for all hexoses (or HexNAcs) provides a new normalization method that facilitates relative quantification of individual glycan nodes in a sample. Although presently constrained in terms of its absolute limits of detection, this method expedites the analysis of clinical biofluids and shows considerable promise as a complementary approach to traditional top-down glycomics.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work presents a novel computational approach to automate the sequencing of glycans using metadata-assisted glycan sequencing, which combines MS analyses with glycan structural information from glycan microarray technology, and represents the first meta-glycome to be defined using this method.
Abstract: Motivation: The goal of deciphering the human glycome has been hindered by the lack of high-throughput sequencing methods for glycans. Although mass spectrometry (MS) is a key technology in glycan sequencing, MS alone provides limited information about the identification of monosaccharide constituents, their anomericity and their linkages. These features of individual, purified glycans can be partly identified using well-defined glycan-binding proteins, such as lectins and antibodies that recognize specific determinants within glycan structures. Results: We present a novel computational approach to automate the sequencing of glycans using metadata-assisted glycan sequencing, which combines MS analyses with glycan structural information from glycan microarray technology. Success in this approach was aided by the generation of a ‘virtual glycome’ to represent all potential glycan structures that might exist within a metaglycomes based on a set of biosynthetic assumptions using known structural information. We exploited this approach to deduce the structures of soluble glycans within the human milk glycome by matching predicted structures based on experimental data against the virtual glycome. This represents the first meta-glycome to be defined using this method and we provide a publically available web-based application to aid in sequencing milk glycans. Availability and implementation: http://glycomeseq.emory.edu Contact: sagravat@bidmc.harvard.edu Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: N-glycans may instead be important for self-renewal rather than for cell fate determination, suggesting that the N-glycome changes seen upon differentiation do not have direct functional links to the differentiation process.
Abstract: Different cell types have different N-glycomes in mammals. This means that cellular differentiation is accompanied by changes in the N-glycan profile. Yet when the N-glycomes of cell types with differing fates diverge is unclear. We have investigated the N-glycan profiles of two different clonal populations of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). One clone (Y101), when differentiated into osteoblasts, showed a marked shift in the glycan profile towards a higher abundance of complex N-glycans and more core fucosylation. Yet chemical inhibition of complex glycan formation during osteogenic differentiation did not prevent the formation of functional osteoblasts. However, the N-glycan profile of another MSC clone (Y202), which cannot differentiate into osteoblasts, was not significantly different from that of the clone that can. Interestingly, incubation of Y202 cells in osteogenic medium caused a similar reduction of oligomannose glycan content in this non-differentiating cell line. Our analysis implies that the N glycome changes seen upon differentiation do not have direct functional links to the differentiation process. Thus N-glycans may instead be important for self-renewal rather than for cell fate determination.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The described cell microarray method represents a simple and sensitive procedure to analyze cell surface glycome in mammalian cells and revealed that glycocalyx of both uGCs and cGCs contains N-glycans, sialic acid terminating glycans, N-acetylglucosamine and O- glycans.
Abstract: The high complexity of glycome, the repertoire of glycans expressed in a cell or in an organism, is difficult to analyze and the use of new technologies has accelerated the progress of glycomics analysis. In the last decade, the microarray approaches, and in particular glycan and lectin microarrays, have provided new insights into evaluation of cell glycosylation status. Here we present a cell microarray method based on cell printing on microarray slides for the analysis of the glycosylation pattern of the cell glycocalyx. In order to demonstrate the reliability of the developed method, the glycome profiles of equine native uncultured mural granulosa cells (uGCs) and in vitro cultured mural granulosa cells (cGCs) were determined and compared. The method consists in the isolation of GCs, cell printing into arrays on microarray slide, incubation with a panel of biotinylated lectins, reaction with fluorescent streptavidin and signal intensity detection by a microarray scanner. Cell microarray technology revealed that glycocalyx of both uGCs and cGCs contains N-glycans, sialic acid terminating glycans, N-acetylglucosamine and O-glycans. The comparison of uGCs and cGCs glycan signals indicated an increase in the expression of sialic acids, N-acetylglucosamine, and N-glycans in cGCs. Glycan profiles determined by cell microarray agreed with those revealed by lectin histochemistry. The described cell microarray method represents a simple and sensitive procedure to analyze cell surface glycome in mammalian cells.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) form an ideal group of well-defined genetic defects to derive important lessons on novel biochemical mechanisms and clinical diagnostic approaches with relevance to more common diseases.
Abstract: Protein glycosylation is increasingly recognized as a crucial modulator of protein function, offering a third layer of biological information over genomics and proteomics. Modern tools for analyzing released N-glycans from cells and body fluids, i.e., the glycome, have shown abnormal protein glycosylation in numerous human diseases. These include both genetic and acquired diseases, ranging from diabetes, cancer, and inflammatory disease to neurodegenerative and neuromuscular disease. Insights from this novel field in human medicine provide exciting perspectives toward understanding disease processes, identifying therapeutic targets, and designing individualized diagnostics based on protein concentrations and glycosylation status. However, the main question is how we can translate this information into concrete biomarkers in a clinical diagnostic setting, with high demands on technical robustness and the ability to interpret results within specific patient groups. Unlike the genetic template for protein synthesis, the process of protein glycosylation is not directly encoded by the genome. Protein N-glycosylation, the best-studied ubiquitous type of glycosylation, follows a sequential pathway in the organelles of the secretory pathway. First, a dolichol-linked glycan composed of 14 monosaccharides is assembled in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)2 and transferred to nascent proteins that enter the ER via the translocon complex. In the final stages in the ER, and further in the Golgi apparatus, the protein-bound glycan is remodeled to a mature glycan that is present on cellular receptors, ion channels, and secreted proteins in plasma. It is becoming increasingly apparent that this process is influenced by many factors, genetic, metabolic, and environmental (such as medication and alcohol abuse). The congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) form an ideal group of well-defined genetic defects to derive important lessons on novel biochemical mechanisms and clinical diagnostic approaches with relevance to more common diseases. More than 100 different genetic defects in various glycosylation pathways are already known, approximately …

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evaluation of the contribution of acid-soluble glycoproteins (ASG)/mucins and extracellular vesicles (EVs) to the complexity of human seminal plasma (hSP) finds insight into the native presentation and distribution of glycans across hSP could help establish molecular environments supporting specific biological activities based on unique ligand capacities.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Glycosylation and Gut Associated Immune Tolerance (GlycoGAIT) is an online database consisting of 548 well characterized genes belonging to glycogenes and lectins along with gene expression data obtained from human biopsy samples under both H. pylori infection and inflammatory bowel disease condition.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Preliminary evidence that the elimination of Neu5Gc may have benefits in pig liver xenotransplantation beyond reducing the binding of natural antibodies is presented.
Abstract: I of glycosyltransferase genes during human evolution is a fundamental cause of differential glycosylation in humans and pigs, resulting in the presence of carbohydrate structures on pig cells that are recognized by natural (preexisting) human antibodies. αGal, the first of these epitopes to be identified, is synthesized by α1,3galactosyltransferase, encoded by theGGTA1 gene. The crucial importance of αGal in solid organ xenotransplantation was demonstrated by the finding that knockout of GGTA1 prevented hyperacute rejection in the pig-to-nonhuman primate (NHP) preclinical model. However, there is evidence to suggest that knockout of additional glycosyltransferase genes will further improve the “compatibility” of porcine xenografts. One such gene is CMAH, which is responsible for the synthesis of N-glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc). The development of efficient genome editing techniques (ZFNs, TALENs, and CRISPR/Cas9) has revolutionized the genetic engineering of donor pigs, allowing precise and rapid targeted mutagenesis in cultured primary cells, which can then be cloned by somatic cell nuclear transfer. The Tector group was the first to adopt this technology to knock out multiple glycosyltransferase genes, namely, GGTA1 and CMAH. When tested against 121 human serum samples, peripheral blood mononuclear cells from double-knockout (DKO) pigs generally bound less antibody than GGTA1 single-KO cells. In this issue of Transplantation, the group presents preliminary evidence that the elimination of Neu5Gc may have benefits in pig liver xenotransplantation beyond reducing the binding of natural antibodies. In vivo and ex vivo models have shown that pig livers rapidly sequester human and NHP platelets, resulting in the development of lifethreatening thrombocytopenia in the pig-to-baboon model (reviewed by Ekser et al). Inhibition and knockout studies indicate that the asialoglycoprotein receptor-1 (ASGR-1) plays an important role in the binding of human and NHP platelets to porcine endothelium, whereas deletion of αGal and/or expression of human CD46 have no effect. In the

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A metastasis-associated tyrosine kinase receptor ephrin-type-A receptor (EPHA2) was highly up-regulated in DIAPH3-silenced cells, indicating a possible connection between EPHA2 and DIaph3, and distinct alterations in the N-glycome were identified, suggesting cross-links between DIAPH 3 and glycosyltransferase networks.
Abstract: We describe a novel solid-phase reversible sample-prep (SRS) platform that enables rapid sample preparation for concurrent proteome and N-glycome characterization for nearly all protein samples. SRS utilizes a uniquely functionalized, silica-based bead that has strong affinity toward proteins with minimal to no affinity for peptides and other small molecules. By leveraging this inherent size difference between proteins and peptides, SRS permits high-capacity binding of proteins, rapid removal of small molecules (detergents, metabolites, salts, peptides, etc.), extensive manipulation including enzymatic and chemical treatments on bead-bound proteins, and easy recovery of N-glycans and peptides. SRS was evaluated in a wide range of samples including glycoproteins, cell lysate, murine tissues, and human urine. SRS was also coupled to a quantitative strategy to investigate the differences between DU145 prostate cancer cells and its DIAPH3-silenced counterpart. Previous studies suggested that DIAPH3 silencing ...