BACKGROUND: Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) represent 1 of the largest groups of metabolic disorders with 130 subtypes identified to date. The majority of CDG subtypes are disorders of N-linked glycosylation, in which carbohydrate residues, namely, N-glycans, are posttranslationally linked to asparagine molecules in peptides. To improve the diagnostic capability for CDG, we developed and validated a plasma N-glycan assay using flow injection- electrospray ionization- quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. METHODS: After PNGase F digestion of plasma glycoproteins, N-glycans were linked to a quinolone using a transient amine group at the reducing end, isolated by a hydrophilic interaction chromatography column, and then identified by accurate mass and quantified using a stable isotope-labeled glycopeptide as the internal standard. RESULTS: This assay differed from other N-glycan profiling methods because it was free of any contamination from circulating free glycans and was semiquantitative. The low end of the detection range tested was at 63 nmol/L for disialo-biantennary N-glycan. The majority of N-glycans in normal plasma had 1% abundance. Abnormal N-glycan profiles from 19 patients with known diagnoses of 11 different CDG subtypes were generated, some of which had previously been reported to have normal N-linked protein glycosylation by carbohydrate-deficient transferrin analysis. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical specificity and sensitivity of N-glycan analysis was much improved with this method. Additional CDGs can be diagnosed that would be missed by carbohydrate-deficient transferrin analysis. The assay provides novel biomarkers with diagnostic and potentially therapeutic significance.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, J., Li, X., Edmondson, A., Meyers, G. D., Izumi, K., Ackermann, A. M., … He, M. (2019). Increased clinical sensitivity and specificity of plasma protein N-glycan profiling for diagnosing congenital disorders of glycosylation by use of flow injection-electrospray ionization-quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Clinical Chemistry, 65(5), 653–663. https://doi.org/10.1373/clinchem.2018.296780
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