4.6 Article

Identification of Differential N-Glycan Compositions in the Serum and Tissue of Colon Cancer Patients by Mass Spectrometry

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology10040343

Keywords

colorectal cancer; LC; MS; MALDI-TOF; MS; N-glycosylation; mass spectrometry

Categories

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel superior (CAPES)-Brasil [001]
  2. Fundacao de amparo a pesquisa do DF (FAP-DF) [00193.0000145/2019-72]

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The incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) is increasing in Brazil and there is a lack of reliable biomarkers for diagnosis and prognosis. Alterations in N-glycosylation profiles in serum and tissues of colon cancer patients were identified using mass spectrometry technologies. While serum N-glycans were mostly decreased, certain forms were overexpressed in tumor tissues. There was little correlation between tissue and serum N-glycosylation profiles in cancer patients. Total serum N-glycome analysis showed potential in discriminating patients from healthy controls, but compositions in serum did not parallel those found in tumor tissues.
Simple Summary Incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) has been rising in Brazil. To date, no reliable biomarker has been described in CRC for diagnosis and prognosis. Modifications in the N-glycosylation profile are usually associated with many cancers, as CRC. In turn, mass spectrometry (MS)-based methods are the most accurate technology in quantification of N-glycans. Therefore, we described a unique pattern of compositions altered in serum and tissues of stages II and III colon cancer patients, identified by MALDI-TOF/MS and LC-MS technology. N-glycans were mostly found decreased in serum whilst oligomannosidic, hypogalactosylated, and tetra-antennary forms were overexpressed in tumor tissues. Total N-glycome in serum of cancer patients was different from the profile found in serum of healthy individuals. Strikingly, no correlation between tissue N-glycosylation profile and serum profile was observed in cancer patients, posing the question where these compositions are originated from. Colorectal cancer (CRC) ranks second as the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. N-glycosylation is one of the most common posttranslational protein modifications. Therefore, we studied the total serum N-glycome (TSNG) of 13 colon cancer patients compared to healthy controls using MALDI-TOF/MS and LC-MS. N-glycosylation of cancer tumor samples from the same cohort were further quantified using a similar methodology. In total, 23 N-glycan compositions were down-regulated in the serum of colon cancer patients, mostly galactosylated forms whilst the mannose-rich HexNAc2Hex7, the fucosylated bi-antennary glycan HexNAc4Hex5Fuc1NeuAc2, and the tetra-antennary HexNAc6Hex7NeuAc3 were up-regulated in serum. Hierarchical clustering analysis of TSNG correctly singled out 85% of the patients from controls. Albeit heterogenous, N-glycosylation of tumor samples showed overrepresented oligomannosidic, bi-antennary hypogalactosylated, and branched compositions related to normal colonic tissue, in both MALDI-TOF/MS and LC-MS analysis. Moreover, compositions found upregulated in tumor tissue were mostly uncorrelated to compositions in serum of cancer patients. Mass spectrometry-based N-glycan profiling in serum shows potential in the discrimination of patients from healthy controls. However, the compositions profile in serum showed no parallel with N-glycans in tumor microenvironment, which suggests a different origin of compositions found in serum of cancer patients.

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