Alteration of the N-glycome of bovine milk glycoproteins during early lactation |
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Authors: | Takimori Shota Shimaoka Hideyuki Furukawa Jun-Ichi Yamashita Tadashi Amano Maho Fujitani Naoki Takegawa Yasuhiro Hammarström Lennart Kacskovics Imre Shinohara Yasuro Nishimura Shin-Ichiro |
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Affiliation: | Laboratory of Advanced Chemical Biology, Graduate School of Advanced Life Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan. |
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Abstract: | Milk provides nutritional, immunological and developmental components for newborns. Whereas identification of such components has been performed by targeting proteins and free oligosaccharides, structural and functional analyses of the N-glycome of milk glycoproteins are scarce. In this study, we investigated, for the first time, the alterations of the bovine milk N-glycome during early lactation (1 day, 1, 2, 3 and 4 weeks postpartum), characterizing more than 80 N-glycans. The glycomic profile of colostrum on day 1 after calving differed substantially from that in other periods during early lactation. The proteins in colostrum obtained 1 day postpartum were more highly sialylated than milk samples obtained at other time points, and the N-glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc)/N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac) ratio was significantly higher on day 1, showing a gradual decline with time. In order to dissect the N-glycome of colostrum, alterations of the N-glycosylation profile of major bovine milk proteins during the early lactation stage were elucidated, revealing that the alteration is largely attributable to qualitative and quantitative N-glycosylation changes of IgG, the major glycoprotein in colostrum. Furthermore, by preparing and analyzing IgGs in which the N-glycan structure and subtypes were well characterized, we found that the interaction between IgG and FcRn was not affected by the structure of the N-glycans attached to IgG. We also found that bovine FcRn binds IgG(2) better than IgG(1) , strongly suggesting that the role of FcRn in the bovine mammary gland is to recycle IgG(2) from the udder to blood, rather than to secrete IgG(1) into colostrum. |
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