» Articles » PMID: 25302577

Quantification of Fucosylated Hemopexin and Complement Factor H in Plasma of Patients with Liver Disease

Overview
Journal Anal Chem
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2014 Oct 11
PMID 25302577
Citations 29
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Enhanced fucosylation has been suggested as a marker for serologic monitoring of liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We present a workflow for quantitative site-specific analysis of fucosylation and apply it to a comparison of hemopexin (HPX) and complement factor H (CFH), two liver-secreted glycoproteins, in healthy individuals and patients with liver cirrhosis and HCC. Label-free LC-MS quantification of glycopeptides derived from these purified glycoproteins was performed on pooled samples (2 pools/group, 5 samples/pool) and complemented by glycosidase assisted analysis using sialidase and endoglycosidase F2/F3, respectively, to improve resolution of glycoforms. Our analysis, presented as relative abundance of individual fucosylated glycoforms normalized to the level of their nonfucosylated counterparts, revealed a consistent increase in fucosylation in liver disease with significant site- and protein-specific differences. We have observed the highest microheterogeneity of glycoforms at the N187 site of HPX, absence of core fucosylation at N882 and N911 sites of CFH, or a higher degree of core fucosylation in CFH compared to HPX, but we did not identify changes differentiating HCC from matched cirrhosis samples. Glycosidase assisted LC-MS-MRM analysis of individual patient samples prepared by a simplified protocol confirmed the quantitative differences. Transitions specific to outer arm fucose document a disease-associated increase in outer arm fucose on both bi- and triantennary glycans at the N187 site of HPX. Further verification is needed to confirm that enhanced fucosylation of HPX and CFH may serve as an indicator of premalignant liver disease. The analytical strategy can be readily adapted to analysis of other proteins in the appropriate disease context.

Citing Articles

A multiplexed microflow LC-MS/MS-PRM assay for serologic quantification of IgG N- and HPX O- glycoforms in liver fibrosis.

Panigrahi A, Zhang L, Benicky J, Sanda M, Ahn J, Goldman R Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):606.

PMID: 36635317 PMC: 9837073. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-27382-0.


Prediction of Intact N-Glycopeptide Retention Time Windows in Hydrophilic Interaction Liquid Chromatography.

Kozlik P, Molnarova K, Jecmen T, Krizek T, Bosakova Z Molecules. 2022; 27(12).

PMID: 35744847 PMC: 9228347. DOI: 10.3390/molecules27123723.


A Rapid LC-MS/MS-PRM Assay for Serologic Quantification of Sialylated O-HPX Glycoforms in Patients with Liver Fibrosis.

Panigrahi A, Benicky J, Wei R, Ahn J, Goldman R, Sanda M Molecules. 2022; 27(7).

PMID: 35408612 PMC: 9000230. DOI: 10.3390/molecules27072213.


Serum Glycoprotein Markers in Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis and Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

Ramachandran P, Xu G, Huang H, Rice R, Zhou B, Lindpaintner K J Proteome Res. 2022; 21(4):1083-1094.

PMID: 35286803 PMC: 8981307. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00965.


Potential Biomarkers for Liver Cancer Diagnosis Based on Multi-Omics Strategy.

Chen F, Wang J, Wu Y, Gao Q, Zhang S Front Oncol. 2022; 12:822449.

PMID: 35186756 PMC: 8851237. DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.822449.


References
1.
Thaysen-Andersen M, Packer N . Site-specific glycoproteomics confirms that protein structure dictates formation of N-glycan type, core fucosylation and branching. Glycobiology. 2012; 22(11):1440-52. DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cws110. View

2.
Nakano M, Nakagawa T, Ito T, Kitada T, Hijioka T, Kasahara A . Site-specific analysis of N-glycans on haptoglobin in sera of patients with pancreatic cancer: a novel approach for the development of tumor markers. Int J Cancer. 2008; 122(10):2301-9. DOI: 10.1002/ijc.23364. View

3.
Isailovic D, Kurulugama R, Plasencia M, Stokes S, Kyselova Z, Goldman R . Profiling of human serum glycans associated with liver cancer and cirrhosis by IMS-MS. J Proteome Res. 2008; 7(3):1109-17. PMC: 3727278. DOI: 10.1021/pr700702r. View

4.
Ferreira V, Pangburn M, Cortes C . Complement control protein factor H: the good, the bad, and the inadequate. Mol Immunol. 2010; 47(13):2187-97. PMC: 2921957. DOI: 10.1016/j.molimm.2010.05.007. View

5.
Fenaille F, Le Mignon M, Groseil C, Ramon C, Riande S, Siret L . Site-specific N-glycan characterization of human complement factor H. Glycobiology. 2007; 17(9):932-44. DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cwm060. View