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IgG glycome in colorectal cancer

Authors :
Aleksandar Vojta
Lovorka Đerek
Evropi Theodoratou
Pauline M. Rudd
Yurii S. Aulchenko
Kujtim Thaçi
Harry Campbell
Maria Timofeeva
Markus Perola
Maja Pučić-Baković
Susan M. Farrington
Jerko Štambuk
Gordan Lauc
Dražen Servis
Annika Wennerström
Malcolm G. Dunlop
Frano Vučković
Source :
Vuckovic, F, Theodoratou, E, Thaci, K, Timofeeva, M, Vojta, A, tambuk, J, Pucic-bakovic, M, erek, L, Servis, D, Rudd, P, Wennerstrom, A, Aulchenko, Y, Farrington, S M, Perola, M, Dunlop, M G, Campbell, H & Lauc, G 2016, ' IgG glycome in colorectal cancer ', Clinical Cancer Research . https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-1867, Clinical Cancer Research
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Purpose: Alternative glycosylation has significant structural and functional consequences on IgG and consequently also on cancer immunosurveillance. Because of technological limitations, the effects of highly heritable individual variations and the differences in the dynamics of changes in IgG glycosylation on colorectal cancer were never investigated before. Experimental Design: Using recently developed high-throughput UPLC technology for IgG glycosylation analysis, we analyzed IgG glycome composition in 760 patients with colorectal cancer and 538 matching controls. Effects of surgery were evaluated in 28 patients sampled before and three times after surgery. A predictive model was built using regularized logistic regression and evaluated using a 10-cross validation procedure. Furthermore, IgG glycome composition was analyzed in 39 plasma samples collected before initial diagnosis of colorectal cancer. Results: We have found that colorectal cancer associates with decrease in IgG galactosylation, IgG sialylation and increase in core-fucosylation of neutral glycans with concurrent decrease of core-fucosylation of sialylated glycans. Although a model based on age and sex did not show discriminative power (AUC = 0.499), the addition of glycan variables into the model considerably increased the discriminative power of the model (AUC = 0.755). However, none of these differences were significant in the small set of samples collected before the initial diagnosis. Conclusions: Considering the functional relevance of IgG glycosylation for both tumor immunosurveillance and clinical efficacy of therapy with mAbs, individual variation in IgG glycosylation may turn out to be important for prediction of disease course or the choice of therapy, thus warranting further, more detailed studies of IgG glycosylation in colorectal cancer. Clin Cancer Res; 22(12); 3078–86. ©2016 AACR.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vuckovic, F, Theodoratou, E, Thaci, K, Timofeeva, M, Vojta, A, tambuk, J, Pucic-bakovic, M, erek, L, Servis, D, Rudd, P, Wennerstrom, A, Aulchenko, Y, Farrington, S M, Perola, M, Dunlop, M G, Campbell, H & Lauc, G 2016, ' IgG glycome in colorectal cancer ', Clinical Cancer Research . https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-1867, Clinical Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dc504c2496ae27e4a98eab8feef2b078