4.3 Article

Specific N-linked glycosylation patterns in areas of necrosis in tumor tissues

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 437, Issue -, Pages 69-76

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijms.2018.01.002

Keywords

Necrosis; Glycosylation; Mass spectrometry imaging; Hypoxia; N-linked glycans; Formalin-fixed tissues

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [R21 CA207779, R21 CA186799-01, R01CA120206, U01 CA168856]
  2. Biorepository and Tissue Analysis Shared Resource, Hollings Cancer Center, Medical University of South Carolina [P30 CA138313]
  3. SmartState South Carolina Centers of Economic Excellence

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Tissue necrosis is a form of cell death common in advanced and aggressive solid tumors, and is associated with areas of intratumoral chronic ischemia. The histopathology of necrotic regions appear as a scaffold of cellular membrane remnants, reflective of the hypoxia and cell degradation events associated with this cellular death pathway. Changes in the glycosylation of cell surface proteins is another common feature of cancer progression. Using a recently developed mass spectrometry imaging approach to evaluate N-linked glycan distributions in human formalin-fixed clinical cancer tissues, differences in the glycan structures of regions of tumor, stroma and necrosis were evaluated. While the structural glycan classes detected in the tumor and stromal regions are typically classified as high mannose or branched glycans, the glycans found in necrotic regions displayed limited branching, contained sialic acid modifications and lack fucose modifications. While this phenomenon was initially classified in breast cancer tissues, it has been also seen in cervical, thyroid and liver cancer samples. These changes in glycosylation within the necrotic regions could provide further mechanistic insight to necrotic changes in cancer tissue and provide new research directions for identifying prognostic markers of necrosis. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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