Ovarian Cancer is Associated with Changes in Glycosylation in Both Acute-Phase Proteins and IgG

Radka Saldova(University of Oxford), Louise Royle(University of Oxford), Catherine M. Radcliffe(University of Oxford), Umi Marshida Abd Hamid(University of Oxford), Rachel Evans(University of Oxford), James N. Arnold(University of Oxford), Rosamonde E. Banks(Cancer Research UK), Richard Hutson(St James's University Hospital), David J. Harvey(University of Oxford), Robin Antrobus(University of Oxford), Ştefana M. Petrescu(Institute of Biochemistry), Raymond A. Dwek(University of Oxford), Pauline M. Rudd(University College Dublin)
Glycobiology
August 28, 2007
Cited by 388Open Access
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Abstract

Ovarian cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women in the Western world. In a pilot scale study, we highlight changes in the total serum glycome of patients with advanced ovarian cancer that might shed insight into disease pathogenesis. These changes include increases in levels of core fucosylated, agalactosyl biantennary glycans (FA2) and sialyl Lewis x (SLe(x)). To investigate further which proteins contribute to these alterations, we developed technology to analyze simultaneously the glycosylation of protein glycoforms contained in single spots excised from a 2D gel (<1 ng protein). The acute-phase proteins, haptoglobin, alpha1-acid glycoprotein, and alpha1-antichymotrypsin from patients contained elevated levels of subsets of glycoforms containing SLe(x). We also established that IgG heavy chains from patients contained twice the level of FA2 compared with healthy controls. Serum CA125 is the only biomarker that is used routinely, and there is a need for complementary markers that will improve both sensitivity and specificity. There was some preliminary indication that combinations of changes in the serum glycome might improve the separation of ovarian cancer and benign tumors; however, a larger study using data receiver operating characteristic curves will be required to draw any firm conclusions.


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