Rebeca Kawahara, Liisa Kautto, Naaz Bansal, Priya Dipta, The Huong Chau, Benoit Liquet-Weiland, Seong Beom Ahn, Morten Thaysen-Andersen
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Cell origin-focused glycoproteomics enabled using the well-curated Human Protein Atlas combined with immunohistochemistry of CRC tumor tissues recapitulated these findings and indicated that the paucimannosidic proteins were in part from tumor-infiltrating monocytes (e.g., MPO, AZU1) and of CRC cell origin (e.g., LGALS3BP, PSAP). Biosynthetically explaining these observations, N-acetyl-β-D-hexosaminidase (Hex) subunit β (HEXB) was found to be overexpressed in CRC tissues relative to normal adjacent colorectal tissues and colocalization and enzyme inhibition studies confirmed that HEXB facilitates paucimannosidic protein biosynthesis in CRC cells. Employing a sensitive, quick, and robust enzyme activity assay, we then showed that Hex activity was elevated in plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with advanced CRC relative to controls and those with early-stage disease. Surveying a large donor cohort, the plasma Hex activity was found to be raised in CRC patients relative to normal controls and correlated with the 5-year survival of CRC patients indicating that elevated plasma Hex activity is a potential disease risk marker for patient outcome. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
提高结直肠癌(CRC)患者的生存率需要非侵入性预后标志物。为了实现这一目标,我们应用非靶向系统糖生物学方法对来自不同疾病阶段和匹配对照的结直肠癌患者的冷冻和福尔马林固定石蜡包埋肿瘤组织和外周血单个核细胞(PBMCs)进行快速检测,以真实地揭示结直肠癌相关的分子变化。定量糖组学和免疫组化(IHC)显示,与正常邻近组织相比,结直肠癌肿瘤中非典型少糖内苷n-聚糖含量升高。利用精心策划的人类蛋白图谱结合CRC肿瘤组织的免疫组化,以细胞起源为重点的糖蛋白组学总结了这些发现,并表明少核苷蛋白部分来自肿瘤浸润单核细胞(如MPO, AZU1)和CRC细胞起源(如LGALS3BP, PSAP)。从生物合成的角度解释了这些观察结果,n -乙酰基-β- d -己糖氨基酶(Hex)亚基β (HEXB)在结直肠癌组织中被发现相对于正常的邻近结直肠癌组织过度表达,共定位和酶抑制研究证实,HEXB促进结直肠癌细胞中少糖苷蛋白的生物合成。采用灵敏、快速和强大的酶活性测定,我们发现,与对照组和早期疾病患者相比,晚期结直肠癌患者的血浆和pbmc中Hex活性升高。在一项大型血浆队列调查中,我们发现与正常对照相比,结直肠癌患者的血浆Hex活性升高,并与结直肠癌患者的5年生存率相关,这表明血浆Hex活性升高是患者预后的潜在疾病风险标志物。我们的糖蛋白组学研究结果为更好的CRC预后和疾病风险分层开辟了道路。
HEXB Drives Raised Paucimannosylation in Colorectal Cancer and Stratifies Patient Risk.
Noninvasive prognostic markers are needed to improve the survival of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. Toward this goal, we applied untargeted systems glycobiology approaches to snap-frozen and formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumor tissues and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from CRC patients spanning different disease stages and matching controls to faithfully uncover molecular changes associated with CRC. Quantitative glycomics and immunohistochemistry revealed that noncanonical paucimannosidic N-glycans are elevated in CRC tumors relative to normal adjacent tissues. Cell origin-focused glycoproteomics enabled using the well-curated Human Protein Atlas combined with immunohistochemistry of CRC tumor tissues recapitulated these findings and indicated that the paucimannosidic proteins were in part from tumor-infiltrating monocytes (e.g., MPO, AZU1) and of CRC cell origin (e.g., LGALS3BP, PSAP). Biosynthetically explaining these observations, N-acetyl-β-D-hexosaminidase (Hex) subunit β (HEXB) was found to be overexpressed in CRC tissues relative to normal adjacent colorectal tissues and colocalization and enzyme inhibition studies confirmed that HEXB facilitates paucimannosidic protein biosynthesis in CRC cells. Employing a sensitive, quick, and robust enzyme activity assay, we then showed that Hex activity was elevated in plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with advanced CRC relative to controls and those with early-stage disease. Surveying a large donor cohort, the plasma Hex activity was found to be raised in CRC patients relative to normal controls and correlated with the 5-year survival of CRC patients indicating that elevated plasma Hex activity is a potential disease risk marker for patient outcome. Our glycoproteomics-driven findings open avenues for better prognostication and disease risk stratification in CRC.
期刊介绍:
The mission of MCP is to foster the development and applications of proteomics in both basic and translational research. MCP will publish manuscripts that report significant new biological or clinical discoveries underpinned by proteomic observations across all kingdoms of life. Manuscripts must define the biological roles played by the proteins investigated or their mechanisms of action.
The journal also emphasizes articles that describe innovative new computational methods and technological advancements that will enable future discoveries. Manuscripts describing such approaches do not have to include a solution to a biological problem, but must demonstrate that the technology works as described, is reproducible and is appropriate to uncover yet unknown protein/proteome function or properties using relevant model systems or publicly available data.
Scope:
-Fundamental studies in biology, including integrative "omics" studies, that provide mechanistic insights
-Novel experimental and computational technologies
-Proteogenomic data integration and analysis that enable greater understanding of physiology and disease processes
-Pathway and network analyses of signaling that focus on the roles of post-translational modifications
-Studies of proteome dynamics and quality controls, and their roles in disease
-Studies of evolutionary processes effecting proteome dynamics, quality and regulation
-Chemical proteomics, including mechanisms of drug action
-Proteomics of the immune system and antigen presentation/recognition
-Microbiome proteomics, host-microbe and host-pathogen interactions, and their roles in health and disease
-Clinical and translational studies of human diseases
-Metabolomics to understand functional connections between genes, proteins and phenotypes