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Dive into the research topics where Frano Vučković is active.

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Featured researches published by Frano Vučković.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2014

Glycans Are a Novel Biomarker of Chronological and Biological Ages

Jasminka Krištić; Frano Vučković; Cristina Menni; Lucija Klarić; Toma Keser; Ivona Bečeheli; Maja Pučić-Baković; Mislav Novokmet; Massimo Mangino; Kujtim Thaqi; Pavao Rudan; Natalija Novokmet; Jelena Šarac; Saša Missoni; Ivana Kolcic; Ozren Polasek; Igor Rudan; Harry Campbell; Caroline Hayward; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Ana M. Valdes; James F. Wilson; Olga Gornik; Dragan Primorac; Vlatka Zoldoš; Tim D. Spector; Gordan Lauc

Fine structural details of glycans attached to the conserved N-glycosylation site significantly not only affect function of individual immunoglobulin G (IgG) molecules but also mediate inflammation at the systemic level. By analyzing IgG glycosylation in 5,117 individuals from four European populations, we have revealed very complex patterns of changes in IgG glycosylation with age. Several IgG glycans (including FA2B, FA2G2, and FA2BG2) changed considerably with age and the combination of these three glycans can explain up to 58% of variance in chronological age, significantly more than other markers of biological age like telomere lengths. The remaining variance in these glycans strongly correlated with physiological parameters associated with biological age. Thus, IgG glycosylation appears to be closely linked with both chronological and biological ages. Considering the important role of IgG glycans in inflammation, and because the observed changes with age promote inflammation, changes in IgG glycosylation also seem to represent a factor contributing to aging. Significance Statement Glycosylation is the key posttranslational mechanism that regulates function of immunoglobulins, with multiple systemic repercussions to the immune system. Our study of IgG glycosylation in 5,117 individuals from four European populations has revealed very extensive and complex changes in IgG glycosylation with age. The combined index composed of only three glycans explained up to 58% of variance in age, considerably more than other biomarkers of age like telomere lengths. The remaining variance in these glycans strongly correlated with physiological parameters associated with biological age; thus, IgG glycosylation appears to be closely linked with both chronological and biological ages. The ability to measure human biological aging using molecular profiling has practical applications for diverse fields such as disease prevention and treatment, or forensics.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2014

Comparative Performance of Four Methods for High-throughput Glycosylation Analysis of Immunoglobulin G in Genetic and Epidemiological Research

Jennifer E. Huffman; Maja Pučić-Baković; Lucija Klarić; Rene Hennig; Maurice H. J. Selman; Frano Vučković; Mislav Novokmet; Jasminka Krištić; Matthias Borowiak; Thilo Muth; Ozren Polasek; Genadij Razdorov; Olga Gornik; Rosina Plomp; Evropi Theodoratou; Alan F. Wright; Igor Rudan; Caroline Hayward; Harry Campbell; André M. Deelder; Udo Reichl; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Erdmann Rapp; Manfred Wuhrer; Gordan Lauc

The biological and clinical relevance of glycosylation is becoming increasingly recognized, leading to a growing interest in large-scale clinical and population-based studies. In the past few years, several methods for high-throughput analysis of glycans have been developed, but thorough validation and standardization of these methods is required before significant resources are invested in large-scale studies. In this study, we compared liquid chromatography, capillary gel electrophoresis, and two MS methods for quantitative profiling of N-glycosylation of IgG in the same data set of 1201 individuals. To evaluate the accuracy of the four methods we then performed analysis of association with genetic polymorphisms and age. Chromatographic methods with either fluorescent or MS-detection yielded slightly stronger associations than MS-only and multiplexed capillary gel electrophoresis, but at the expense of lower levels of throughput. Advantages and disadvantages of each method were identified, which should inform the selection of the most appropriate method in future studies.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2015

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Associates with Proinflammatory Potential of the Immunoglobulin G Glycome

Irena Trbojević Akmačić; Nicholas T. Ventham; Evropi Theodoratou; Frano Vučković; Nicholas A. Kennedy; Jasminka Krištić; Elaine R. Nimmo; Rahul Kalla; Hazel E. Drummond; Jerko Štambuk; Malcolm G. Dunlop; Mislav Novokmet; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Olga Gornik; Harry Campbell; Maja Pučić Baković; Jack Satsangi; Gordan Lauc

Background:Glycobiology is an underexplored research area in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and glycans are relevant to many etiological mechanisms described in IBD. Alterations in N-glycans attached to the immunoglobulin G (IgG) Fc fragment can affect molecular structure and immunological function. Recent genome-wide association studies reveal pleiotropy between IBD and IgG glycosylation. This study aims to explore IgG glycan changes in ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohns disease (CD). Methods:IgG glycome composition in patients with UC (n = 507), CD (n = 287), and controls (n = 320) was analyzed by ultra performance liquid chromatography. Results:Statistically significant differences in IgG glycome composition between patients with UC or CD, compared with controls, were observed. Both UC and CD were associated with significantly decreased IgG galactosylation (digalactosylation, UC: odds ratio [OR] = 0.71; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.5–0.9; P = 0.01; CD: OR = 0.41; CI, 0.3–0.6; P = 1.4 × 10−9) and significant decrease in the proportion of sialylated structures in CD (OR = 0.46, CI, 0.3–0.6, P = 8.4 × 10−8). Logistic regression models incorporating measured IgG glycan traits were able to distinguish UC and CD from controls (UC: P = 2.13 × 10−6 and CD: P = 2.20 × 10−16), with receiver–operator characteristic curves demonstrating better performance of the CD model (area under curve [AUC] = 0.77) over the UC model (AUC = 0.72) (P = 0.026). The ratio of the presence to absence of bisecting GlcNAc in monogalactosylated structures was increased in patients with UC undergoing colectomy compared with no colectomy (FDR-adjusted, P = 0.05). Conclusions:The observed differences indicate significantly increased inflammatory potential of IgG in IBD. Changes in IgG glycosylation may contribute to IBD pathogenesis and could alter monoclonal antibody therapeutic efficacy. IgG glycan profiles have translational potential as IBD biomarkers.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2015

Association of systemic lupus erythematosus with decreased immunosuppressive potential of the IgG glycome.

Frano Vučković; Jasminka Krištić; Ivan Gudelj; María Teruel; Toma Keser; Marija Pezer; Maja Pučić-Baković; Jerko Štambuk; Irena Trbojević-Akmačić; Clara Barrios; Tamara Pavić; Cristina Menni; Youxin Wang; Yong Zhou; Liufu Cui; Haicheng Song; Qiang Zeng; Xiuhua Guo; Bernardo A. Pons-Estel; Paul McKeigue; Alan Leslie Patrick; Olga Gornik; Tim D. Spector; Miroslav Harjacek; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Mariam Molokhia; Wei Wang; Gordan Lauc

Glycans attached to the Fc portion of IgG are important modulators of IgG effector functions. Interindividual differences in IgG glycome composition are large and they associate strongly with different inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. IKZF1, HLA–DQ2A/B, and BACH2 genetic loci that affect IgG glycome composition show pleiotropy with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), indicating a potentially causative role of aberrant IgG glycosylation in SLE. We undertook this large multicenter case–control study to determine whether SLE is associated with altered IgG glycosylation.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Changes in IgG and total plasma protein glycomes in acute systemic inflammation

Mislav Novokmet; Edita Lukić; Frano Vučković; Željko –Durić; Toma Keser; Katarina Rajšl; Daniel Remondini; Gastone Castellani; Hrvoje Gasparovic; Olga Gornik; Gordan Lauc

Recovery after cardiac surgery is a complex process that has to compensate for both individual variability and extensive tissue damage in the context of systemic inflammation. Protein glycosylation is essential in many steps of the inflammatory cascade, but due to technological limitations the role of individual variation in glycosylation in systemic inflammation has not been addressed until now. We analysed composition of the total plasma and IgG N-glycomes in 107 patients undergoing cardiac surgery. In nearly all individuals plasma N-glycome underwent the same pattern of changes in the first 72 h, revealing a general mechanism of glycosylation changes. To the contrary, changes in the IgG glycome were very individualized. Bi-clustering analysis revealed the existence of four distinct patterns of changes. One of them, characterized by a rapid increase in galactosylated glycoforms, was associated with nearly double mortality risk measured by EuroSCORE II. Our results indicate that individual variation in IgG glycosylation changes during acute systemic inflammation associates with increased mortality risk and indicates new avenues for the development of personalized diagnostic and therapeutic approach.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2015

Systemic lupus erythematosus associates with the decreased immunosuppressive potential of the IgG glycome

Frano Vučković; Jasminka Krištić; Ivan Gudelj; Maria Teruel Artacho; Toma Keser; Marija Pezer; Maja Pučić-Baković; Jerko Štambuk; Irena Trbojević-Akmačić; Clara Barrios; Tamara Pavić; Cristina Menni; Youxin Wang; Yong Zhou; Liufu Cui; Haicheng Song; Qiang Zeng; Xiuhua Guo; Bernardo A. Pons-Estel; Paul McKeigue; Alan Leslie Patrick; Olga Gornik; Tim D. Spector; Miroslav Harjacek; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Mariam Molokhia; Wei Wang; Gordan Lauc

Glycans attached to the Fc portion of IgG are important modulators of IgG effector functions. Interindividual differences in IgG glycome composition are large and they associate strongly with different inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. IKZF1, HLA–DQ2A/B, and BACH2 genetic loci that affect IgG glycome composition show pleiotropy with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), indicating a potentially causative role of aberrant IgG glycosylation in SLE. We undertook this large multicenter case–control study to determine whether SLE is associated with altered IgG glycosylation.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Glycosylation of Immunoglobulin G: Role of Genetic and Epigenetic Influences

Cristina Menni; Toma Keser; Massimo Mangino; Jordana T. Bell; Idil Erte; Irena Trbojević Akmačić; Frano Vučković; Maja Pučić Baković; Olga Gornik; Mark I. McCarthy; Vlatka Zoldoš; Tim D. Spector; Gordan Lauc; Ana M. Valdes

Objective To determine the extent to which genetic and epigenetic factors contribute to variations in glycosylation of immunoglobulin G (IgG) in humans. Methods 76 N-glycan traits in circulating IgG were analyzed by UPLC in 220 monozygotic and 310 dizygotic twin pairs from TwinsUK. A classical twin study design was used to derive the additive genetic, common and unique environmental components defining the variance in these traits. Epigenome-wide association analysis was performed using the Illumina 27k chip. Results 51 of the 76 glycan traits studied have an additive genetic component (heritability, h 2)≥ 0.5. In contrast, 12 glycan traits had a low genetic contribution (h2<0.35). We then tested for association between methylation levels and glycan levels (P<2 x10-6). Among glycan traits with low heritability probe cg08392591 maps to a CpG island 5’ from the ANKRD11 gene, a p53 activator on chromosome 16. Probe cg26991199 maps to the SRSF10 gene involved in regulation of RNA splicing and particularly in regulation of splicing of mRNA precursors upon heat shock. Among those with high heritability we found cg13782134 (mapping to the NRN1L gene) and cg16029957 mapping near the QPCT gene to be array-wide significant. The proportion of array-wide epigenetic associations was significantly larger (P<0.005) among glycans with low heritability (42%) than in those with high heritability (6.2%). Conclusions Glycome analyses might provide a useful integration of genetic and non-genetic factors to further our understanding of the role of glycosylation in both normal physiology and disease.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2016

IgG Glycome in Colorectal Cancer

Frano Vučković; Evropi Theodoratou; Kujtim Thaçi; Maria Timofeeva; Aleksandar Vojta; Jerko Štambuk; Maja Pučić-Baković; Pauline M. Rudd; Lovorka Đerek; Dražen Servis; Annika Wennerström; Susan M. Farrington; Markus Perola; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Malcolm G. Dunlop; Harry Campbell; Gordan Lauc

Purpose: Alternative glycosylation has significant structural and functional consequences on IgG and consequently also on cancer immunosurveillance. Because of technological limitations, the effects of highly heritable individual variations and the differences in the dynamics of changes in IgG glycosylation on colorectal cancer were never investigated before. Experimental Design: Using recently developed high-throughput UPLC technology for IgG glycosylation analysis, we analyzed IgG glycome composition in 760 patients with colorectal cancer and 538 matching controls. Effects of surgery were evaluated in 28 patients sampled before and three times after surgery. A predictive model was built using regularized logistic regression and evaluated using a 10-cross validation procedure. Furthermore, IgG glycome composition was analyzed in 39 plasma samples collected before initial diagnosis of colorectal cancer. Results: We have found that colorectal cancer associates with decrease in IgG galactosylation, IgG sialylation and increase in core-fucosylation of neutral glycans with concurrent decrease of core-fucosylation of sialylated glycans. Although a model based on age and sex did not show discriminative power (AUC = 0.499), the addition of glycan variables into the model considerably increased the discriminative power of the model (AUC = 0.755). However, none of these differences were significant in the small set of samples collected before the initial diagnosis. Conclusions: Considering the functional relevance of IgG glycosylation for both tumor immunosurveillance and clinical efficacy of therapy with mAbs, individual variation in IgG glycosylation may turn out to be important for prediction of disease course or the choice of therapy, thus warranting further, more detailed studies of IgG glycosylation in colorectal cancer. Clin Cancer Res; 22(12); 3078–86. ©2016 AACR.


Biochemistry | 2015

High-throughput glycomics: optimization of sample preparation.

Irena Trbojević Akmačić; Ivo Ugrina; Jerko Štambuk; Ivan Gudelj; Frano Vučković; Gordan Lauc; Maja Pučić-Baković

Glycosylation affects structure, folding, and function of numerous proteins. Aberrant glycosylation has been shown to be associated with different diseases. A wide range of analytical methods is available for glycan analysis of antibodies (mainly IgG), but analysis of plasma glycans is less established due to additional challenges encountered with higher complexity of the sample. Here we describe development and optimization of a high-throughput sample preparation method for hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography and ultra-performance liquid chromatography analysis of plasma N-glycans. Clean-up of labeled glycans was found to be the largest source of variation, and we tested cellulose, silica gel, Bio-Gel, and hydrophilic GHP filter as stationary phases for solid-phase extraction. All stationary phases were shown to be suitable for purification of labeled glycans, but GHP filter plate in combination with cold 96% acetonitrile had the highest reproducibility and was easiest to work with. The method was further optimized with Plackett—Burman screening design and validated in terms of analysis of major step variation and between-day and between-person variation. The developed method is fast, cost-effective, and easy to perform, and it has very good reproducibility during long period of time, enabling the detection of biological variability of the plasma N-glycome.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Glycosylation of plasma IgG in colorectal cancer prognosis

Evropi Theodoratou; Kujtim Thaçi; Felix Agakov; Maria Timofeeva; Jerko Štambuk; Maja Pučić-Baković; Frano Vučković; Peter Orchard; Anna Agakova; Farhat V.N. Din; Ewan Brown; Pauline M. Rudd; Susan M. Farrington; Malcolm G. Dunlop; Harry Campbell; Gordan Lauc

In this study we demonstrate the potential value of Immunoglobulin G (IgG) glycosylation as a novel prognostic biomarker of colorectal cancer (CRC). We analysed plasma IgG glycans in 1229 CRC patients and correlated with survival outcomes. We assessed the predictive value of clinical algorithms and compared this to algorithms that also included glycan predictors. Decreased galactosylation, decreased sialylation (of fucosylated IgG glycan structures) and increased bisecting GlcNAc in IgG glycan structures were strongly associated with all-cause (q < 0.01) and CRC mortality (q = 0.04 for galactosylation and sialylation). Clinical algorithms showed good prediction of all-cause and CRC mortality (Harrell’s C: 0.73, 0.77; AUC: 0.75, 0.79, IDI: 0.02, 0.04 respectively). The inclusion of IgG glycan data did not lead to any statistically significant improvements overall, but it improved the prediction over clinical models for stage 4 patients with the shortest follow-up time until death, with the median gain in the test AUC of 0.08. These glycan differences are consistent with significantly increased IgG pro-inflammatory activity being associated with poorer CRC prognosis, especially in late stage CRC. In the absence of validated biomarkers to improve upon prognostic information from existing clinicopathological factors, the potential of these novel IgG glycan biomarkers merits further investigation.

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Yurii S. Aulchenko

Novosibirsk State University

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