1 research outputs found
Label-Free Glycopeptide Quantification for Biomarker Discovery in Human Sera
Glycan
moieties of glycoproteins modulate many biological processes
in mammals, such as immune response, inflammation, and cell signaling.
Numerous studies show that many human diseases are correlated with
quantitative alteration of protein glycosylation. In some cases, these
changes can occur for certain types of glycans over specific sites
in a glycoprotein rather than on the global abundance of the glycoprotein.
Conventional analytical techniques that analyze the abundance of glycans
cleaved from glycoproteins cannot reveal these subtle effects. Here
we present a novel statistical method to quantify the site-specific
glycosylation of glycoproteins in complex samples using label-free
mass spectrometric techniques. Abundance variations between sites
of a glycoprotein as well as different glycoforms, that is, glycopeptides
with different glycans attached to the same site, can be detected
using these techniques. We applied our method to an esophageal cancer
study based on blood serum samples from cancer patients in an attempt
to detect potential biomarkers of site-specific N-linked glycosylation.
A few glycoproteins, including vitronectin, showed significantly different
site-specific glycosylations within cancer/control samples, indicating
that our method is ready to be used for the discovery of glycosylated
biomarkers