Association of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus With Decreased Immunosuppressive Potential of the IgG Glycome

Frano Vučković(Genos (Croatia)), Jasminka Krištić(Genos (Croatia)), Ivan Gudelj(Genos (Croatia)), María Teruel(Pfizer-University of Granada-Junta de Andalucía Centre for Genomics and Oncological Research), Toma Keser(University of Zagreb), Marija Pezer(Genos (Croatia)), Maja Pučić‐Baković(Genos (Croatia)), Jerko Štambuk(Genos (Croatia)), Irena Trbojević‐Akmačić(Genos (Croatia)), Clara Barrios(King's College London), Tamara Pavić(University of Zagreb), Cristina Menni(King's College London), Youxin Wang(Capital Medical University), Yong Zhou(Capital Medical University), Liufu Cui(North China University of Science and Technology), Haicheng Song(North China University of Science and Technology), Qiang Zeng(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Xiuhua Guo(Capital Medical University), Bernardo A. Pons‐Estel(Centro Científico Tecnólogico - Rosario), Paul McKeigue(University of Edinburgh), Alan L. Patrick, Olga Gornik(University of Zagreb), Tim D. Spector(King's College London), Miroslav Harjaček(Sisters of Charity Hospital), Marta E. Alarcón‐Riquelme(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Mariam Molokhia(King's College London), Wei Wang(Edith Cowan University), Gordan Lauc(University of Zagreb)
Arthritis & Rheumatology
July 21, 2015
Cited by 266Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Glycans attached to the Fc portion of IgG are important modulators of IgG effector functions. Interindividual differences in IgG glycome composition are large and they associate strongly with different inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. IKZF1, HLA-DQ2A/B, and BACH2 genetic loci that affect IgG glycome composition show pleiotropy with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), indicating a potentially causative role of aberrant IgG glycosylation in SLE. We undertook this large multicenter case-control study to determine whether SLE is associated with altered IgG glycosylation. METHODS: Using ultra-performance liquid chromatography analysis of released glycans, we analyzed the composition of the IgG glycome in 261 SLE patients and 247 matched controls of Latin American Mestizo origin (the discovery cohort) and in 2 independent replication cohorts of different ethnicity (108 SLE patients and 193 controls from Trinidad, and 106 SLE patients and 105 controls from China). RESULTS: Multiple statistically significant differences in IgG glycome composition were observed between patients and controls. The most significant changes included decreased galactosylation and sialylation of IgG (which regulate proinflammatory and antiinflammatory actions of IgG) as well as decreased core fucose and increased bisecting N-acetylglucosamine (which affect antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity). CONCLUSION: The IgG glycome in SLE patients is significantly altered in a way that decreases immunosuppressive action of circulating immunoglobulins. The magnitude of observed changes is associated with the intensity of the disease, indicating that aberrant IgG glycome composition or changes in IgG glycosylation may be an important molecular mechanism in SLE.


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