4.7 Article

Integrated N-glycoproteomics Analysis of Human Saliva for Lung Cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00701

Keywords

saliva; N-glycosites; intact N-glycopeptides; HILIC; lung cancer

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai [21ZR1433200, 19ZR1427800]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFC1200204]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21675110, 31727801]
  4. Key Scientific Project of Shanghai Jiao Tong University [TMSK-2020-130, YG2017MS80]

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This study investigated the N-glycoproteome of saliva samples for lung cancer detection and identified dysregulated site-specific glycoforms that hold promise for noninvasive detection of lung cancer.
Aberrant protein N-glycosylation is a cancer hallmark, which has great potential for cancer detection. However, large-scale and in-depth analysis of N-glycosylation remains challenging because of its high heterogeneity, complexity, and low abundance. Human saliva is an attractive diagnostic body fluid, while few efforts explored its N-glycoproteome for lung cancer. Here, we utilized a zwitterionic-hydrophilic interaction chromatography-based strategy to specifically enrich salivary glycopeptides. Through quantitative proteomics analysis, 1492 and 1234 intact N-glycopeptides were confidently identified from pooled saliva samples of 10 subjects in the nonsmall-cell lung cancer group and 10 subjects in the normal control group. Accordingly, 575 and 404 N-glycosites were revealed for the lung cancer group and normal control group. In particular, 154 N-glycosites and 259 site-specific glycoforms were significantly dysregulated in the lung cancer group. Several N-glycosites located at the same glycoprotein and glycans attached to the same N-glycosites were observed with differential expressions, including haptoglobin, Mucin-5B, lactotransferrin, and alpha- 1-acid glycoprotein 1. These N-glycoproteins were mainly related to inflammatory responses, infectious diseases, and cancers. Our study achieved comprehensive characterization of salivary N-glycoproteome, and dysregulated site-specific glycoforms hold promise for noninvasive detection of lung cancer.

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