Serum glycoprotein profiling by lectin affinity microarray to distinguish the various stages of primary liver carcinogenesis.
- Author:
Rui JING
1
;
Heng HU
;
Chun SUN
;
Tianren HUANG
;
Wei DENG
;
Jilin LI
;
Jiahua YU
;
Yinkun LIU
;
Chunyan ZHANG
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Carcinogenesis; Chromatography, Affinity; Cohort Studies; Glycoproteins; blood; Humans; Lectins; blood; Liver Neoplasms; blood; pathology
- From: Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2014;22(5):358-363
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo identify specific serum glycoprotein profiles that correspond to the carcinogenic process of primary liver cancer (PLC) by analyzing a population with high-incidence of PLC using lectin affinity microarray.
METHODSSerum samples were collected from individuals classified as high risk for PLC (including patients with liver cirrhosis and hepatitis B) and development of PLC was recorded. Healthy individuals served as normal controls. The serum samples were subjected to glycoprotein profling by using lectin microarrays and the results were confirmed by lectin blot. Between-group differences were statistically analyzed.
RESULTSPLC carcinogenesis was found to be correlated with enhanced affinity for AAL, ACL, ConA, LCA, MPL, NML, PHA-E, PHA-L, PSA, RCA-I, STL, VAL,WGA, and SNA (P less than 0.05). These data implied that changes in specific glycan structures, such as aFuc, GlcNAc, GalNAc, mannose, bisecting GlcNAc and terminal beta1-4 Gal, may be involved in PLC carcinogenesis . The PLC group showed significantly different results for all detected lectins, except SNA (P less than 0.05). However, among the PLC group, the SNA affinity was not significantly different for the hepatitis B group (P =0.443, P more than 0.05).
CONCLUSIONGlycans may be associated with the carcinogenic process of PLC and may be developed as diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers of PLC in the future.