4.8 Article

Glycoproteoform Profiles of Individual Patients' Plasma Alpha-1-Antichymotrypsin are Unique and Extensively Remodeled Following a Septic Episode

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FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
卷 11, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.608466

关键词

acute-phase proteins; sepsis-diagnostics; glycoproteomic analysis; alpha-1-antichymotrypsin; acute phase response (APR)

资金

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [184.034.019]
  2. EU Horizon 2020 program INFRAIA project Epic-XS [823839]
  3. TOP-Punt Grant [718.015.003]
  4. NWO Veni project [VI.Veni.192.058]
  5. TA-project [741.018.201]

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The relationship between acute-phase proteins and sepsis may be related to the occurrence and severity of inflammatory responses. Monitoring the changes in plasma proteome and glycoproteoform profiles of septic patients can reflect the physiological state of the patients, with each patient exhibiting unique responses and features. Importantly, the changes induced by sepsis in glycoproteoform profiles of AACT did not readily subside after discharge from ICU.
Sepsis and septic shock remain the leading causes of death in intensive care units (ICUs), yet the pathogenesis originating from the inflammatory response during sepsis remains ambiguous. Acute-phase proteins are typically highly glycosylated, and the nature of the glycans have been linked to the incidence and severity of such inflammatory responses. To further build upon these findings we here monitored, the longitudinal changes in the plasma proteome and, in molecular detail, glycoproteoform profiles of alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (AACT) extracted from plasma of ten individual septic patients. For each patient we included four different time-points, including post-operative (before sepsis) and following discharge from the ICU. We isolated AACT from plasma depleted for albumin, IgG and serotransferrin and used high-resolution native mass spectrometry to qualitatively and quantitatively monitor the multifaceted glycan microheterogeneity of desialylated AACT, which allowed us to monitor how changes in the glycoproteoform profiles reflected the patient's physiological state. Although we observed a general trend in the remodeling of the AACT glycoproteoform profiles, e.g. increased fucosylation and branching/LacNAc elongation, each patient exhibited unique features and responses, providing a resilient proof-of-concept for the importance of personalized longitudinal glycoproteoform profiling. Importantly, we observed that the AACT glycoproteoform changes induced by sepsis did not readily subside after discharge from ICU.

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