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Featured researches published by Poh-Choo Pang.


Science | 2011

Human sperm binding is mediated by the sialyl-Lewis(x) oligosaccharide on the zona pellucida.

Poh-Choo Pang; Philip C.N. Chiu; Cheuk-Lun Lee; Lan-Yi Chang; Maria Panico; Howard R. Morris; Stuart M. Haslam; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Gary F. Clark; William S.B. Yeung; Anne Dell

Fertilization in humans is initiated by binding of spermatozoa to a selectin ligand on the egg’s extracellular matrix. Human fertilization begins when spermatozoa bind to the extracellular matrix coating of the oocyte, known as the zona pellucida (ZP). One spermatozoan then penetrates this matrix and fuses with the egg cell, generating a zygote. Although carbohydrate sequences on the ZP have been implicated in sperm binding, the nature of the ligand was unknown. Here, ultrasensitive mass spectrometric analyses revealed that the sialyl-Lewisx sequence [NeuAcα2-3Galβ1-4(Fucα1-3)GlcNAc], a well-known selectin ligand, is the most abundant terminal sequence on the N- and O-glycans of human ZP. Sperm-ZP binding was largely inhibited by glycoconjugates terminated with sialyl-Lewisx sequences or by antibodies directed against this sequence. Thus, the sialyl-Lewisx sequence represents the major carbohydrate ligand for human sperm-egg binding.


International Journal of Cancer | 2008

Glycosylation status of haptoglobin in sera of patients with prostate cancer vs. benign prostate disease or normal subjects

Tsutomu Fujimura; Yasuro Shinohara; Bérangère Tissot; Poh-Choo Pang; Masaki Kurogochi; Seiichi Saito; Yoichi Arai; Martin Sadilek; Kimie Murayama; Anne Dell; Shin-Ichiro Nishimura; Sen Itiroh Hakomori

We studied chemical level and glycosylation status of haptoglobin in sera of patients with prostate cancer, as compared to benign prostate disease and normal subjects, with the following results. (i) Haptoglobin level was enhanced significantly in sera of prostate cancer. (ii) Sialylated bi‐antennary glycans were the dominant structures in haptoglobins from all 3 sources, regardless of different site of N‐linked glycan. The N‐linked glycans at N184 were exclusively bi‐antennary, and showed no difference between prostate cancer vs. benign prostate disease. (iii) Tri‐antennary, N‐linked, fucosylated glycans, carrying at least 1 sialyl‐Lewisx/a antenna, were predominantly located on N207 or N211 within the amino acid 203‐215 sequence of the β‐chain of prostate cancer, and were minimal in benign prostate disease. Fucosylated glycans were not observed in normal subjects. A minor tri‐antennary N‐linked glycan was observed at N241 of the β‐chain in prostate cancer, which was absent in benign prostate disease. (iv) None of these N‐linked structures showed the expected presence of disialylated antennae with GalNAcβ4(NeuAcα3)Galβ3(NeuAcα6)GlcNAcβGal, or its analogue, despite cross‐reactivity of prostate cancer haptoglobin with monoclonal antibody RM2. (v) Minor levels of O‐glycosylation were identified in prostate cancer haptoglobin for the first time. Mono‐ and disialyl core Type 1 O‐linked structures were identified after reductive β‐elimination followed by methylation and mass spectrometric analysis. No evidence was found for the presence of specific RM2 or other tumor‐associated glycosyl epitopes linked to this O‐glycan core. In summary, levels of haptoglobin are enhanced in sera of prostate cancer patients, and the N‐glycans attached to a defined peptide region of its β‐chain are characterized by enhanced branching as well as antenna fucosylation.


FEBS Letters | 2009

Glycoproteomics: Past, present and future

Bérangère Tissot; Simon J. North; Alessio Ceroni; Poh-Choo Pang; Maria Panico; Floriana Rosati; Antonietta Capone; Stuart M. Haslam; Anne Dell; Howard R. Morris

This invited paper reviews the study of protein glycosylation, commonly known as glycoproteomics, beginning with the origins of the subject area in the early 1970s shortly after mass spectrometry was first applied to protein sequencing. We go on to describe current analytical approaches to glycoproteomic analyses, with exemplar projects presented in the form of the complex story of human glycodelin and the characterisation of blood group H eptitopes on the O‐glycans of gp273 from Unio elongatulus. Finally, we present an update on the latest progress in the field of automated and semi‐automated interpretation and annotation of these data in the form of GlycoWorkBench, a powerful informatics tool that provides valuable assistance in unravelling the complexities of glycoproteomic studies.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Expression of Bisecting Type and Lewisx/Lewisy Terminated N-Glycans on Human Sperm

Poh-Choo Pang; Bérangère Tissot; Erma Z. Drobnis; Peter Sutovsky; Howard R. Morris; Gary F. Clark; Anne Dell

Human sperm lack major histocompatibility class I molecules, making them susceptible to lysis by natural killer (NK) cells. Major histocompatibility class I negative tumor cells block NK cell lysis by expressing sufficient amounts of bisecting type N-glycans on their surfaces. Therefore, sperm could employ the same strategy to evade NK cell lysis. The total N-glycans derived from sperm were sequenced using ultrasensitive mass spectrometric and conventional approaches. Three major classes of N-glycans were detected, (i) high mannose, (ii) biantennary bisecting type, and (iii) biantennary, triantennary, and tetraantennary oligosaccharides terminated with Lewisx and Lewisy sequences. Immunostaining of normal sperm showed that glycoproteins bearing Lewisy sequences are localized to the acrosome and not the plasma membrane. In contrast, defective sperm showed distinct surface labeling with anti-Lewisy antibody. The substantial expression of high mannose and complex type N-glycans terminated with Lewisx and Lewisy sequences suggests that sperm glycoproteins are highly decorated with ligands for DC-SIGN. Based on previous studies, the addition of such carbohydrate signals should inhibit antigen-specific responses directed against sperm glycoproteins in both the male and female reproductive systems. Thus, the major N-glycans of human sperm are associated with the inhibition of both innate and adaptive immune responses. These results provide more support for the eutherian fetoembryonic defense system hypothesis that links the expression of carbohydrate functional groups to the protection of gametes and the developing human in utero. This study also highlights the usefulness of glycomic profiling for revealing potential physiological functions of glycans expressed in specific cell types.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Effects of differential glycosylation of glycodelins on lymphocyte survival.

Cheuk-Lun Lee; Poh-Choo Pang; William S.B. Yeung; Bérangère Tissot; Maria Panico; Terence T. Lao; Ivan K. Chu; Kai-Fai Lee; Man-Kin Chung; Kevin K.W. Lam; Riitta Koistinen; Hannu Koistinen; Markku Seppälä; Howard R. Morris; Anne Dell; Philip C.N. Chiu

Glycodelin is a human glycoprotein with four reported glycoforms, namely glycodelin-A (GdA), glycodelin-F (GdF), glycodelin-C (GdC), and glycodelin-S (GdS). These glycoforms have the same protein core and appear to differ in their N-glycosylation. The glycosylation of GdA is completely different from that of GdS. GdA inhibits proliferation and induces cell death of T cells. However, the glycosylation and immunomodulating activities of GdF and GdC are not known. This study aimed to use ultra-high sensitivity mass spectrometry to compare the glycomes of GdA, GdC, and GdF and to study the relationship between the immunological activity and glycosylation pattern among glycodelin glycoforms. Using MALDI-TOF strategies, the glycoforms were shown to contain an enormous diversity of bi-, tri-, and tetra-antennary complex-type glycans carrying Galβ1–4GlcNAc (lacNAc) and/or GalNAcβ1–4GlcNAc (lacdiNAc) antennae backbones with varying levels of fucose and sialic acid substitution. Interestingly, they all carried a family of Sda (NeuAcα2–3(GalNAcβ1–4)Gal)-containing glycans, which were not identified in the earlier study because of less sensitive methodologies used. Among the three glycodelins, GdA is the most heavily sialylated. Virtually all the sialic acid on GdC is located on the Sda antennae. With the exception of the Sda epitope, the GdC N-glycome appears to be the asialylated counterpart of the GdA/GdF glycomes. Sialidase activity, which may be responsible for transforming GdA/GdF to GdC, was detected in cumulus cells. Both GdA and GdF inhibited the proliferation, induced cell death, and suppressed interleukin-2 secretion of Jurkat cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells. In contrast, no immunosuppressive effect was observed for GdS and GdC.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

An Aeromonas caviae genomic island is required for both O-antigen lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis and flagellin glycosylation.

S. Mohammed B. Tabei; Paul G. Hitchen; Michaela J. Day-Williams; Susana Merino; Richard Vart; Poh-Choo Pang; Gavin J. Horsburgh; Silvia Viches; Markus Wilhelms; Juan M. Tomás; Anne Dell; Jonathan G. Shaw

Aeromonas caviae Sch3N possesses a small genomic island that is involved in both flagellin glycosylation and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-antigen biosynthesis. This island appears to have been laterally acquired as it is flanked by insertion element-like sequences and has a much lower G+C content than the average aeromonad G+C content. Most of the gene products encoded by the island are orthologues of proteins that have been shown to be involved in pseudaminic acid biosynthesis and flagellin glycosylation in both Campylobacter jejuni and Helicobacter pylori. Two of the genes, lst and lsg, are LPS specific as mutation of them results in the loss of only a band for the LPS O-antigen. Lsg encodes a putative Wzx flippase, and mutation of Lsg affects only LPS; this finding supports the notion that flagellin glycosylation occurs within the cell before the flagellins are exported and assembled and not at the surface once the sugar has been exported. The proteins encoded by flmA, flmB, neuA, flmD, and neuB are thought to make up a pseudaminic acid biosynthetic pathway, and mutation of any of these genes resulted in the loss of motility, flagellar expression, and a band for the LPS O-antigen. Furthermore, pseudaminic acid was shown to be present on both flagellin subunits that make up the polar flagellum filament, to be present in the LPS O-antigen of the A. caviae wild-type strain, and to be absent from the A. caviae flmD mutant strain.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

Analysis of the Human Seminal Plasma Glycome Reveals the Presence of Immunomodulatory Carbohydrate Functional Groups

Poh-Choo Pang; Bérangère Tissot; Erma Z. Drobnis; Howard R. Morris; Anne Dell; Gary F. Clark

A recent analysis of the human sperm N-glycome confirmed the expression of biantennary bisecting type N-glycans and terminal Lewis(x)/Lewis(y) sequences previously implicated in the suppression of the innate and adaptive immune responses, respectively. In this study, glycomic analysis of seminal plasma glycoproteins derived from four fertile men was carried out to determine if the same sequences were expressed on the N- and O-glycome of human seminal plasma glycoproteins. Three major families of N-glycans were detected: (i) high mannose glycans (Man(5-7)GlcNAc(2)); (ii) bi-, tri-, and tetraantennary core-fucosylated complex type N-glycans with antennae terminated with Lewis(x) and/or Lewis(y) sequences; and (iii) bi-, tri-, and tetraantennary core-fucosylated complex type N-glycans with antennae capped with sialic acid. Analysis of the O-glycans revealed Core 1 and Core 2 type structures that are also fucosylated or sialylated or a combination of both. The same high mannose and polyfucosylated N-glycans associated with sperm are also present in seminal plasma. Bisecting type N-glycan expression is greatly decreased compared to sperm, while sialylated glycans are abundant in some individuals and minor in others. In summary, the glycosylation profile of seminal plasma glycoproteins is consistent with the modulation of the adaptive but not the innate arm of the human immune response.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Systemic blockade of sialylation in mice with a global inhibitor of sialyltransferases

Matthew S. Macauley; Britni M. Arlian; Cory D. Rillahan; Poh-Choo Pang; Nikki Bortell; Maria Cecilia G. Marcondes; Stuart M. Haslam; Anne Dell; James C. Paulson

Background: In vivo pharmacological inhibition of sialyltransferases has, to date, not been possible. Results: 3F-NeuAc acts as a global sialyltransferase inhibitor in mice and causes kidney and liver dysfunction. Conclusion: Sialoside expression can be modulated in vivo with a sialyltransferase inhibitor. Significance: Pharmacological blockade of sialoside expression will be an important tool for future exploration of sialic acid in health and disease. Sialic acid terminates glycans of glycoproteins and glycolipids that play numerous biological roles in health and disease. Although genetic tools are available for interrogating the effects of decreased or abolished sialoside expression in mice, pharmacological inhibition of the sialyltransferase family has, to date, not been possible. We have recently shown that a sialic acid analog, 2,4,7,8,9-pentaacetyl-3Fax-Neu5Ac-CO2Me (3F-NeuAc), added to the media of cultured cells shuts down sialylation by a mechanism involving its intracellular conversion to CMP-3F-NeuAc, a competitive inhibitor of all sialyltransferases. Here we show that administering 3F-NeuAc to mice dramatically decreases sialylated glycans in cells of all tissues tested, including blood, spleen, liver, brain, lung, heart, kidney, and testes. A single dose results in greatly decreased sialoside expression for over 7 weeks in some tissues. Although blockade of sialylation with 3F-NeuAc does not affect viability of cultured cells, its use in vivo has a deleterious “on target” effect on liver and kidney function. After administration of 3F-NeuAc, liver enzymes in the blood are dramatically altered, and mice develop proteinuria concomitant with dramatic loss of sialic acid in the glomeruli within 4 days, leading to irreversible kidney dysfunction and failure to thrive. These results confirm a critical role for sialosides in liver and kidney function and document the feasibility of pharmacological inhibition of sialyltransferases for in vivo modulation of sialoside expression.


Methods in Enzymology | 2010

Mass Spectrometric Analysis of Mutant Mice

Simon J. North; Jihye Jang-Lee; Rebecca Harrison; Kevin Canis; Mohd Nazri Ismail; Alana Trollope; Aristotelis Antonopoulos; Poh-Choo Pang; Sara Al-Chalabi; A. Tony Etienne; Anne Dell; Stuart M. Haslam

Mass spectrometry (MS) has proven to be the preeminent tool for the rapid, high-sensitivity analysis of the primary structure of glycans derived from diverse biological sources including cells, fluids, secretions, tissues, and organs. These analyses are anchored by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight (MALDI-TOF) analysis of permethylated derivatives of glycan pools released from the samples, to produce glycomic mass fingerprints. The application of complimentary techniques, such as chemical and enzymatic digestions, GC-MS linkage analysis, and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) utilizing both electrospray (ES) and MALDI-TOF/TOF, together with bioinformatic tools allows the elucidation of incrementally more detailed structural information from the sample(s) of interest. The mouse as a model organism offers many advantages in the study of human biology, health, and disease; it is a mammal, shares 99% genetic homology with humans and its genome supports targeted mutagenesis in specific genes to produce knockouts efficiently and precisely. Glycomic analyses of tissues and organs from mice genetically deficient in one or more glycosylation gene and comparison with data collected from wild-type samples enables the facile identification of changes and perturbations within the glycome. The Consortium for Functional Glycomics (CFG) has been applying such MS-based glycomic analyses to a range of murine tissues from both wild-type and glycosylation-knockout mice in order to provide a repository of structural data for the glycobiology community. In this chapter, we describe in detail the methodologies used to prepare, derivatize, purify, and analyze glycan pools from mouse organs and tissues by MS. We also present a summary of data produced from the CFG systematic structural analysis of wild-type and knockout mouse tissues, together with a detailed example of a glycomic analysis of the Mgat4a knockout mouse.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Mapping the complete glycoproteome of virion-derived HIV-1 gp120 provides insights into broadly neutralizing antibody binding

Maria Panico; Laura Bouché; Daniel Binet; Michael-John O’Connor; Dinah Rahman; Poh-Choo Pang; Kevin Canis; Simon J. North; Ronald C. Desrosiers; Elena Chertova; Brandon F. Keele; Julian W. Bess; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Stuart M. Haslam; Anne Dell; Howard R. Morris

The surface envelope glycoprotein (SU) of Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), gp120SU plays an essential role in virus binding to target CD4+ T-cells and is a major vaccine target. Gp120 has remarkably high levels of N-linked glycosylation and there is considerable evidence that this “glycan shield” can help protect the virus from antibody-mediated neutralization. In recent years, however, it has become clear that gp120 glycosylation can also be included in the targets of recognition by some of the most potent broadly neutralizing antibodies. Knowing the site-specific glycosylation of gp120 can facilitate the rational design of glycopeptide antigens for HIV vaccine development. While most prior studies have focused on glycan analysis of recombinant forms of gp120, here we report the first systematic glycosylation site analysis of gp120 derived from virions produced by infected T lymphoid cells and show that a single site is exclusively substituted with complex glycans. These results should help guide the design of vaccine immunogens.

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Anne Dell

Imperial College London

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Maria Panico

Imperial College London

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Kevin Canis

Imperial College London

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