A lectin affinity workflow targeting glycosite-specific, cancer-related carbohydrate structures in trypsin-digested human plasma |
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Authors: | Penelope M. Drake Birgit Schilling Richard K. Niles Miles Braten Eric Johansen Haichuan Liu Michael Lerch Dylan J. Sorensen Bensheng Li Simon Allen Steven C. Hall H. Ewa Witkowska Fred E. Regnier Bradford W. Gibson Susan J. Fisher |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, 513 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0556, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA;bBuck Institute for Age Research, 8001 Redwood Boulevard, Novato, CA 94945, USA;c201 S. University Street, HANS B054, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA;dDepartment of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Box 0446, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA |
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Abstract: | Glycans are cell-type-specific, posttranslational protein modifications that are modulated during developmental and disease processes. As such, glycoproteins are attractive biomarker candidates. Here, we describe a mass spectrometry-based workflow that incorporates lectin affinity chromatography to enrich for proteins that carry specific glycan structures. As increases in sialylation and fucosylation are prominent among cancer-associated modifications, we focused on Sambucus nigra agglutinin (SNA) and Aleuria aurantia lectin (AAL), lectins which bind sialic acid- and fucose-containing structures, respectively. Fucosylated and sialylated glycopeptides from human lactoferrin served as positive controls, and high-mannose structures from yeast invertase served as negative controls. The standards were spiked into Multiple Affinity Removal System (MARS) 14-depleted, trypsin-digested human plasma from healthy donors. Samples were loaded onto lectin columns, separated by HPLC into flow-through and bound fractions, and treated with peptide: N-glycosidase F to remove N-linked glycans. The deglycosylated peptide fractions were interrogated by ESI HPLC-MS/MS. We identified a total of 122 human plasma glycoproteins containing 247 unique glycosites. Importantly, several of the observed glycoproteins (e.g., cadherin 5 and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin) typically circulate in plasma at low nanogram per milliliter levels. Together, these results provide mass spectrometry-based evidence of the utility of incorporating lectin-separation platforms into cancer biomarker discovery pipelines. |
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Keywords: | Lectin chromatography Glycopeptide Plasma Cancer Biomarker Mass spectrometry |
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