Wonryeon Cho
Purdue University
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Clinical Chemistry | 2010
Penelope M. Drake; Wonryeon Cho; Bensheng Li; Akraporn Prakobphol; Eric B. Johansen; N. Leigh Anderson; Fred E. Regnier; Bradford W. Gibson; Susan J. Fisher
BACKGROUND Cancer has profound effects on gene expression, including a cells glycosylation machinery. Thus, tumors produce glycoproteins that carry oligosaccharides with structures that are markedly different from the same protein produced by a normal cell. A single protein can have many glycosylation sites that greatly amplify the signals they generate compared with their protein backbones. CONTENT In this article, we survey clinical tests that target carbohydrate modifications for diagnosing and treating cancer. We present the biological relevance of glycosylation to disease progression by highlighting the role these structures play in adhesion, signaling, and metastasis and then address current methodological approaches to biomarker discovery that capitalize on selectively capturing tumor-associated glycoforms to enrich and identify disease-related candidate analytes. Finally, we discuss emerging technologies--multiple reaction monitoring and lectin-antibody arrays--as potential tools for biomarker validation studies in pursuit of clinically useful tests. SUMMARY The future of carbohydrate-based biomarker studies has arrived. At all stages, from discovery through verification and deployment into clinics, glycosylation should be considered a primary readout or a way of increasing the sensitivity and specificity of protein-based analyses.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2009
Kwanyoung Jung; Wonryeon Cho; Fred E. Regnier
Lectin affinity chromatography using concanavalin A (Con A), Helix pomatia agglutinin (HPA), Lycopersicon esculentum lectin (LEL), Aleuria aurantia lectin (AAL) and Lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA) was used to investigate the utility of narrow selectivity lectins in the characterization of plasma glycoproteome diversity and to recognize cancer associated aberrations in glycosylation. Following affinity chromatographic selection, proteins were tryptically digested, the peptide fragments separated by reversed phase chromatography (RPC), and fractions from RPC identified by tandem mass spectrometry. The diversity of glycosylation found with narrow selectivity lectins was generally 2/3 that of Con A and not related to protein abundance. Small groups of proteins were found with each of the affinity columns, HPA, LEL, AAL, and LCA, that changed 3-fold or more in concentration between normal and breast cancer patient plasma. Although the number of cancer patients examined was too small to validate cancer marker candidates, they are clearly worth examining in a larger, more diverse patient population.
Analytical Chemistry | 2008
Wonryeon Cho; Kwanyoung Jung; Fred E. Regnier
Immunoaffinity chromatography (IAC) was used to isolate and identify potential cancer biomarker glycoproteins by targeting disease-associated glycans. Glycoproteins were selected from plasma of disease-free and breast cancer patients with an anti-Lewis x (Le(x)) IAC column. After extensive washing of the IAC column to remove abundant proteins, the selected proteins were eluted with an acidic mobile phase and identified in two ways. The protocol used in route A involved the steps of tryptic digestion, reversed-phase chromatographic fractionation of the digest, and identification of peptides in collected RPC fractions by MALDI-MS/MS. Route B differed in that IAC-selected proteins were further fractionated by reversed-phase chromatography before proteolysis of individual chromatographic fractions and identification by MALDI-MS/MS. Route A was the more efficacious of the two protocols in total number of proteins identified. Of the 26 proteins identified, 9 were found to be potential breast cancer marker candidates based on their elevation in breast cancer patients. The potential of these candidates as cancer markers remains to be validated in much larger, more diverse populations of breast cancer patients.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2012
Penelope M. Drake; Birgit Schilling; Richard K. Niles; Akraporn Prakobphol; Bensheng Li; Kwanyoung Jung; Wonryeon Cho; Miles Braten; Halina D. Inerowicz; Katherine E. Williams; Matthew E. Albertolle; Jason M. Held; Demetris C. Iacovides; Dylan J. Sorensen; Obi L. Griffith; Eric B. Johansen; Anna M. Zawadzka; Michael P. Cusack; Simon Allen; Matthew Gormley; Steven C. Hall; H. Ewa Witkowska; Joe W. Gray; Fred E. Regnier; Bradford W. Gibson; Susan J. Fisher
We used a lectin chromatography/MS-based approach to screen conditioned medium from a panel of luminal (less aggressive) and triple negative (more aggressive) breast cancer cell lines (n=5/subtype). The samples were fractionated using the lectins Aleuria aurantia (AAL) and Sambucus nigra agglutinin (SNA), which recognize fucose and sialic acid, respectively. The bound fractions were enzymatically N-deglycosylated and analyzed by LC-MS/MS. In total, we identified 533 glycoproteins, ∼90% of which were components of the cell surface or extracellular matrix. We observed 1011 glycosites, 100 of which were solely detected in ≥3 triple negative lines. Statistical analyses suggested that a number of these glycosites were triple negative-specific and thus potential biomarkers for this tumor subtype. An analysis of RNaseq data revealed that approximately half of the mRNAs encoding the protein scaffolds that carried potential biomarker glycosites were up-regulated in triple negative vs luminal cell lines, and that a number of genes encoding fucosyl- or sialyltransferases were differentially expressed between the two subtypes, suggesting that alterations in glycosylation may also drive candidate identification. Notably, the glycoproteins from which these putative biomarker candidates were derived are involved in cancer-related processes. Thus, they may represent novel therapeutic targets for this aggressive tumor subtype.
Applied Optics | 2007
Leilei Peng; Manoj M. Varma; Wonryeon Cho; Fred E. Regnier; David D. Nolte
Adaptive spinning-disk interferometry is capable of measuring surface profiles of a thin biolayer with subnanometer longitudinal resolution. High-speed phase modulation in the signal beam arises from the moving surface height profile on the spinning disk and is detected as a homodyne signal via dynamic two-wave mixing. A photorefractive quantum-well device performs as an adaptive mixer that compensates disk wobble and vibration while it phase-locks the signal and reference waves in the phase quadrature condition (pi/2 relative phase between the signal and local oscillator). We performed biosensing of immobilized monolayers of antibodies on the disk in both transmission and reflection detection modes. Single- and dual-analyte adaptive spinning-disk immunoassays were demonstrated with good specificity and without observable cross-reactivity. Reflection-mode detection enhances the biosensing sensitivity to one-twentieth of a protein monolayer, creates a topographic map of the protein layer, and can differentiate monolayers of different species by their effective optical thicknesses.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2010
Wonryeon Cho; Kwanyoung Jung; Fred E. Regnier
Recent studies have shown that antibodies targeting Lewis x (Le(x)) antigen are a valuable tool in the isolation and identification of glycoproteins in plasma. A focus of this study was to determine whether sialylated Lewis x (sLe(x)) antigen carrying glycoproteins occur in human plasma and whether an antibody targeting this antigen could be used to isolate and identify glycoproteins bearing this antigen. An additional objective was to determine the degree to which proteins conjugated to Le(x) and sLe(x) antigens are similar in structure. A specific anti-sLe(x) antibody (anti-sLe(x)Ab), CHO-131, immobilized in an immunoaffinity column was used to select a set of specific sLe(x) bearing proteins from human plasma, after which they were identified by either of two analytical strategies. One approach was to further resolve the affinity selected proteins by reversed phase chromatography (RPC), tryptic digest the RPC fractions, and identify peptide fragments by MALDI-MS/MS. The second was to tryptic digest the affinity selected protein fraction, further resolve the tryptic fragments by RPC, and identify peptides from RPC fractions by MALDI-MS/MS. Histidine-rich glycoprotein, plasminogen, apolipoprotein A-I, vitronectin, proteoglycan-4, clusterin, Ig gamma-2 chain C region, Ig mu chain C region, and interalpha-trypsin inhibitor heavy chain H4 were found to change three folds or more in association with breast cancer. Fifty percent of the glycoproteins carrying either sLe(x) antigen from CHO-131 selection, Le(x) antigen from selection with TG-1 antibody, or both were found to be changed three folds or more in concentration in breast cancer plasma relative to controls.
Applied Optics | 2007
Ming Zhao; Wonryeon Cho; Fred E. Regnier; David D. Nolte
Common-path differential phase-contrast interferometry measures the spatial gradient of surface dipole density on a bio-optical compact disk (BioCD) and is sensitive to small changes in dipole density following molecular binding of target molecules out of solution. The recognition molecules are antibody IgG proteins that are deposited in periodic patterns on the BioCD using soft lithography or photolithography on the silanized silica surfaces of dielectric mirrors. Spatial carrier-wave sideband demodulation extracts the slowly varying protein envelope that modulates the protein carrier frequency. The experimental interferometric profilometry has surface height sensitivity down to 20 pm averaged over a lateral scale of 70 microm with a corresponding scaling mass sensitivity limit of 1.5 pg/mm. Under the conditions of an IgG immunoassay with background changes caused during incubation, the scaling mass sensitivity is approximately 7 pg/mm. A saturated reverse immunoassay performed with IgG at 100 ng/ml showed false positive and false negative rates of 0.2%.
Journal of Separation Science | 2010
Wonryeon Cho; Kwanyoung Jung; Fred E. Regnier
Selectivity of both peptide- and glycan-targeting antibodies was examined by 2-D LC-MS/MS. Proteins selected from biological extracts immunospecifically in a first chromatography dimension using antibodies immobilized by either covalent coupling or adsorption to protein G were desorbed with a denaturing mobile phase and transferred to a 1.5 microm nonporous particle RP chromatography (NP-RPC) column in a second dimension. Protein peak capacity of the NP-RPC column was approximately 50. Peaks collected from the RPC column were tryptic digested and the peptide fragments were identified by MALDI-MS/MS. The objective of this analytical strategy was to discriminate between protein antigens and nonantigens through identification of their peptides, leading to an evaluation of the selectivity of antibodies and immunosorbents. Quantification of the relative amount of antigen and nonantigen species captured by immunosorbents was achieved by absorbance, along with the likely capture mechanism. A limitation of the approach was in discriminating between isoforms of an antigen in which neither the antibody nor the LC-MS system targeted the differentiating feature in the isoforms.
Analytical Chemistry | 2013
Kwanyoung Jung; Wonryeon Cho
Glycan-targeting affinity chromatography systems are becoming increasingly important as tools in the purification, enrichment, and identification of glycoproteins. The great advantage of this strategy is that immobilized lectin and antibody selectors allow specific glycan structures to be matched with a particular protein. It is also possible to show that a glycan seen at one site in a glycoprotein may not be present at another glycosylation site in the same glycoprotein. A problem with single-column affinity chromatography is how to obtain information on glycan diversity within the oligosaccharide portions of captured glycoproteins. Although all the glycoprotein species bearing a particular glycan feature will be captured by an affinity column, there is no way of knowing whether the ligand being targeted appears alone or coresides with a series of other glycan features in the same oligosaccharide conjugate. The work being described here examines the utility of serial affinity columns in determining whether individual glycan structures appear alone or together with other glycans in specific proteins. Four different types of affinity columns were examined in two series; the LEL → HPA → anti-Le(x)Ab → anti-sLe(x)Ab series and the anti-sLe(x)Ab → anti-Le(x)Ab → HPA → LEL series. Patterns in protein capture from these two series were very different. Thus, serial affinity chromatography (SAC) can be a valuable tool in recognizing diversity in protein glycosylation, especially when the order of columns in the SAC series is varied. Two clear types of diversity were recognized. One is the independent occurrence of different affinity-targetable glycan features in the same glycoprotein. The other is that multiple targetable glycan features were coresident in the same glycoprotein. The great advantage of this method is that it couples easily with current methods used in glycoproteomics.
Analytical Chemistry | 2015
Wonryeon Cho
The work described here examines displacement phenomena that play a role in lectin affinity chromatography and their potential to impact reproducibility. This was achieved using Lycopersicon esculentum lectin (LEL), a lectin widely used in monitoring cancer. Four small identical LEL columns were coupled in series to form a single affinity chromatography system with the last in the series connected to an absorbance detector. The serial affinity column set (SACS) was then loaded with human plasma proteins. At the completion of loading, the column set was disassembled, the four columns were eluted individually, the captured proteins were trypsin digested, the peptides were deglycosylated with PNGase F, and the parent proteins were identified through mass spectral analyses. Significantly different sets of glycoproteins were selected by each column, some proteins appearing to be exclusively bound to the first column while others were bound further along in the series. Clearly, sample displacement chromatography (SDC) occurs. Glycoproteins were bound at different places in the column train, identifying the presence of glycoforms with different affinity on a single glycoprotein. It is not possible to see these phenomena in the single column mode of chromatography. Moreover, low abundance proteins were enriched, which facilitates detection. The great advantage of this method is that it differentiates between glycoproteins on the basis of their binding affinity. Displacement phenomena are concluded to be a significant component of the separation mechanism in heavily loaded lectin affinity chromatography columns. This further suggests that care must be exercised in sample loading of lectin columns to prevent analyte displacement with nonretained proteins.