Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen
Leiden University Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2015
Karli R. Reiding; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Gerda C. M. Vreeker; Florent Clerc; Stephanie Holst; Albert Bondt; Manfred Wuhrer; Yuri E. M. van der Burgt
Glycosylation is a post-translational modification of key importance with heterogeneous structural characteristics. Previously, we have developed a robust, high-throughput MALDI-TOF-MS method for the comprehensive profiling of human plasma N-glycans. In this approach, sialic acid residues are derivatized with linkage-specificity, namely the ethylation of α2,6-linked sialic acid residues with parallel lactone formation of α2,3-linked sialic acids. In the current study, this procedure was used as a starting point for the automation of all steps on a liquid-handling robot system. This resulted in a time-efficient and fully standardized procedure with throughput times of 2.5 h for a first set of 96 samples and approximately 1 h extra for each additional sample plate. The mass analysis of the thus-obtained glycans was highly reproducible in terms of relative quantification, with improved interday repeatability as compared to that of manual processing.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2016
Bas C. Jansen; David Falck; Noortje de Haan; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Genadij Razdorov; Gordan Lauc; Manfred Wuhrer
Bottom-up glycoproteomics by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is an established approach for assessing glycosylation in a protein- and site-specific manner. Consequently, tools are needed to automatically align, calibrate, and integrate LC-MS glycoproteomics data. We developed a modular software package designed to tackle the individual aspects of an LC-MS experiment, called LaCyTools. Targeted alignment is performed using user defined m/z and retention time (tr) combinations. Subsequently, sum spectra are created for each user defined analyte group. Quantitation is performed on the sum spectra, where each user defined analyte can have its own tr, minimum, and maximum charge states. Consequently, LaCyTools deals with multiple charge states, which gives an output per charge state if desired, and offers various analyte and spectra quality criteria. We compared throughput and performance of LaCyTools to combinations of available tools that deal with individual processing steps. LaCyTools yielded relative quantitation of equal precision (relative standard deviation <0.5%) and higher trueness due to the use of MS peak area instead of MS peak intensity. In conclusion, LaCyTools is an accurate automated data processing tool for high-throughput analysis of LC-MS glycoproteomics data. Released under the Apache 2.0 license, it is freely available on GitHub ( https://github.com/Tarskin/LaCyTools ).
Transfusion | 2015
Rick Kapur; Luciana Della Valle; Onno J.H.M. Verhagen; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Peter Ligthart; Masja de Haas; Belinda Kumpel; Manfred Wuhrer; C. Ellen van der Schoot; Gestur Vidarsson
RhIG is obtained from hyperimmunized healthy anti‐D donors (HIDs) boosted with D+ red blood cells (RBCs). One hypothesis for its mechanism of action is fast clearance of opsonized D+ RBCs through Fcγ receptor (FcγR)III. Levels of immunoglobulin (Ig)G Fc‐fucosylation influence interactions with FcγRIII, with less Fc‐fucosylation strengthening the interaction.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016
Karli R. Reiding; Emanuela Lonardi; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Manfred Wuhrer
Ethyl esterification is a technique for the chemical modification of sialylated glycans, leading to enhanced stability when performing matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)-mass spectrometry (MS), as well as allowing the efficient detection of both sialylated and non-sialylated glycans in positive ion mode. In addition, the method shows specific reaction products for α2,3- and α2,6-linked sialic acids, leading to an MS distinguishable mass difference. Here, we describe the ethyl esterification protocol for 96 glycan samples, including enzymatic N-glycan release, the aforementioned ethyl esterification, glycan enrichment, MALDI target preparation, and the MS(/MS) measurement.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Noortje de Haan; Karli R. Reiding; Jasminka Krištić; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Gordan Lauc; Manfred Wuhrer
N-linked glycosylation of the fragment crystallizable (Fc)-region of immunoglobulin G (IgG) is known to have a large influence on the activity of the antibody, an effect reported to be IgG subclass specific. This situation applies both to humans and mice. The mouse is often used as experimental animal model to study the effects of Fc-glycosylation on IgG effector functions, and results are not uncommonly translated back to the human situation. However, while human IgG Fc-glycosylation has been extensively characterized in both health and disease, this is not the case for mice. To characterize the glycosylation profile of murine IgG-Fc and in addition evaluate the systematic glycosylation differences between mouse strains, sexes, and IgG subclasses, we used nanoliquid chromatography mass spectrometry (nanoLC-MS(/MS)) to look at the subclass-specific IgG Fc-glycopeptides of male and female mice from the strains BALB/c, C57BL/6, CD-1, and Swiss Webster. The structural analysis revealed the presence of predominantly fucosylated, diantennary glycans, with varying amounts of galactosylation and α2,6-sialylation. In addition, we report glycosylation features not previously reported in an Fc-specific way on murine IgG, including monoantennary, hybrid, and high mannose structures, as well as diantennary structures without a core fucose, with a bisecting N-acetylglucosamine, or with α1,3-galactosylation. Pronounced differences were detected between strains and the IgG subclasses within each strain. Especially the large spread in galactosylation and sialylation levels found between both strains and subclasses may vastly influence IgG effector functions. Mouse strain-based and subclass-specific glycosylation differences should be taken into account when designing and interpreting immunological and glycobiological mouse studies involving IgG effector functions.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Evelina Ferrantelli; Karima Farhat; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Karli R. Reiding; Robert H.J. Beelen; Frans J. van Ittersum; Manfred Wuhrer; Viktoria Dotz
Mass spectrometric glycomics was used as an innovative approach to identify biomarkers in serum and dialysate samples from peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. PD is a life-saving treatment worldwide applied in more than 100,000 patients suffering from chronic kidney disease. PD treatment uses the peritoneum as a natural membrane to exchange waste products from blood to a glucose-based solution. Daily exposure of the peritoneal membrane to these solutions may cause complications such as peritonitis, fibrosis and inflammation which, in the long term, lead to the failure of the treatment. It has been shown in the last years that protein N-glycosylation is related to inflammatory and fibrotic processes. Here, by using a recently developed MALDI-TOF-MS method with linkage-specific sialic acid derivatisation, we showed that alpha2,6-sialylation, especially in triantennary N-glycans from peritoneal effluents, is associated with critical clinical outcomes in a prospective cohort of 94 PD patients. Moreover, we found an association between the levels of presumably immunoglobulin-G-related glycans as well as galactosylation of diantennary glycans with PD-related complications such as peritonitis and loss of peritoneal mesothelial cell mass. The observed glycomic changes point to changes in protein abundance and protein-specific glycosylation, representing candidate functional biomarkers of PD and associated complications.
Glycobiology | 2018
Christoph Q. Schmidt; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Markus J. Harder; Manfred Wuhrer; Thilo Stehle; Bärbel S. Blaum
Abstract Complement factor H (FH), an elongated and substantially glycosylated 20-domain protein, is a soluble regulator of the complement alternative pathway (AP). It contains several glycan binding sites which mediate recognition of α2-3-linked sialic acid (FH domain 20) and glycosaminoglycans (domains 6–8 and 19–20). FH also binds the complement C3-activation product C3b, a powerful opsonin and focal point for the formation of C3-convertases of the AP feedback loop. In freely circulating FH the C3b binding site in domains 19–20 is occluded, a phenomenon that is not fully understood and could be mediated by an intramolecular interaction between FH’s intrinsic sialylated glycosylation and its own sialic acid binding site. In order to assess this possibility, we characterized FH’s sialylation with respect to glycosidic linkage type and searched for further potential, not yet characterized sialic acid binding sites in FH and its seven-domain spanning splice variant and fellow complement regulator FH like-1 (FHL-1). We also probed FH binding to the sialic acid variant Neu5Gc which is not expressed in humans but on heterologous erythrocytes that restrict the human AP and in FH transgenic mice. We find that FH contains mostly α2-6-linked sialic acid, making an intramolecular interaction with its α2-3-sialic acid specific binding site and an associated self-lock mechanism unlikely, substantiate that there is only a single sialic acid binding site in FH and none in FHL-1, and demonstrate direct binding of FH to the nonhuman sialic acid Neu5Gc, supporting the use of FH transgenic mouse models for studies of complement-related diseases.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2015
Bas C. Jansen; Karli R. Reiding; Albert Bondt; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Magnus Palmblad; David Falck; Manfred Wuhrer
Mbio | 2014
Luiz Gustavo Gardinassi; Viktoria Dotz; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Roque P. Almeida; Carlos Henrique Nery Costa; Dorcas Lamounier Costa; Oleg A. Mayboroda; Gustavo Rocha Garcia; Manfred Wuhrer; Isabel Kinney Ferreira de Miranda Santos
Glycoconjugate Journal | 2016
Yoann Rombouts; Hulda S. Jónasdóttir; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Karli R. Reiding; Bas C. Jansen; Jona Freysdottir; Ingibjorg Hardardottir; Andreea Ioan-Facsinay; Martin Giera; Manfred Wuhrer