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  • Plasma N-Glycan Signatures Are Associated With Features of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

    Author(s)
    Clerc, Florent
    Novokmet, Mislav
    Dotz, Viktoria
    Reiding, Karli R
    de Haan, Noortje
    Kammeijer, Guinevere SM
    Dalebout, Hans
    Bladergroen, Marco R
    Vukovic, Frano
    Rapp, Erdmann
    Targan, Stephan R
    Barron, Gildardo
    Manetti, Natalia
    Latiano, Anna
    McGovern, Dermot PB
    Annese, Vito
    Lauc, Gordan
    Wuhrer, Manfred
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Kolarich, Daniel
    Year published
    2018
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Background & Aims: Biomarkers are needed for early detection of Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) or to predict patient outcomes. Glycosylation is a common and complex posttranslational modification of proteins that affects their structure and activity. We compared plasma N-glycosylation profiles between patients with CD or UC and healthy individuals (controls). Methods: We analyzed the total plasma N-glycomes of 2635 patients with inflammatory bowel diseases and 996 controls by mass spectrometry with a linkage-specific sialic acid derivatization technique. Plasma samples were acquired from 2 hospitals in ...
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    Background & Aims: Biomarkers are needed for early detection of Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) or to predict patient outcomes. Glycosylation is a common and complex posttranslational modification of proteins that affects their structure and activity. We compared plasma N-glycosylation profiles between patients with CD or UC and healthy individuals (controls). Methods: We analyzed the total plasma N-glycomes of 2635 patients with inflammatory bowel diseases and 996 controls by mass spectrometry with a linkage-specific sialic acid derivatization technique. Plasma samples were acquired from 2 hospitals in Italy (discovery cohort, 1989 patients with inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] and 570 controls) and 1 medical center in the United States (validation cohort, 646 cases of IBD and 426 controls). Sixty-three glycoforms met our criteria for relative quantification and were extracted from the raw data with the software MassyTools. Common features shared by the glycan compositions were combined in 78 derived traits, including the number of antennae of complex-type glycans and levels of fucosylation, bisection, galactosylation, and sialylation. Associations of plasma N-glycomes with age, sex, CD, UC, and IBD-related parameters such as disease location, surgery and medication, level of C-reactive protein, and sedimentation rate were tested by linear and logistic regression. Results: Plasma samples from patients with IBD had a higher abundance of large-size glycans compared with controls, a decreased relative abundance of hybrid and high-mannose structures, lower fucosylation, lower galactosylation, and higher sialylation (α2,3- and α2,6-linked). We could discriminate plasma from patients with CD from that of patients with UC based on higher bisection, lower galactosylation, and higher sialylation (α2,3-linked). Glycosylation patterns were associated with disease location and progression, the need for a more potent medication, and surgery. These results were replicated in a large independent cohort. Conclusions: We performed high-throughput analysis to compare total plasma N-glycomes of individuals with vs without IBD and to identify patterns associated with disease features and the need for treatment. These profiles might be used in diagnosis and for predicting patients’ responses to treatment.
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    Journal Title
    GASTROENTEROLOGY
    Volume
    155
    Issue
    3
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2018.05.030
    Subject
    Clinical sciences
    Glycoconjugates
    Glycobiology
    Immunology not elsewhere classified
    Immunology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/382781
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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