Serum N-Glycosylation in Parkinson's Disease: A Novel Approach for Potential Alterations.

Journal: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)
Published Date:

Abstract

In this study, we present the application of a novel capillary electrophoresis (CE) method in combination with label-free quantitation and support vector machine-based feature selection (support vector machine-estimated recursive feature elimination or SVM-RFE) to identify potential glycan alterations in Parkinson's disease. Specific focus was placed on the use of neutral coated capillaries, by a dynamic capillary coating strategy, to ensure stable and repeatable separations without the need of non-mass spectrometry (MS) friendly additives within the separation electrolyte. The developed online dynamic coating strategy was applied to identify serum N-glycosylation by CE-MS/MS in combination with exoglycosidase sequencing. The annotated structures were quantified in 15 controls and 15 Parkinson's disease patients by label-free quantitation. Lower sialylation and increased fucosylation were found in Parkinson's disease patients on tri-antennary glycans with 2 and 3 terminal sialic acids. The set of potential glycan alterations was narrowed by a recursive feature elimination algorithm resulting in the efficient classification of male patients.

Authors

  • Csaba Váradi
    Faculty of Materials Science and Engineering, Institute of Chemistry, University of Miskolc, 3515 Miskolc, Hungary. kemcsv@uni-miskolc.hu.
  • Károly Nehéz
    Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Information Technology, University of Miskolc, 3515 Miskolc, Hungary. aitnehez@uni-miskolc.hu.
  • Olivér Hornyák
    Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Information Technology, University of Miskolc, 3515 Miskolc, Hungary. oliver.hornyak@uni-miskolc.hu.
  • Béla Viskolcz
    Faculty of Materials Science and Engineering, Institute of Chemistry, University of Miskolc, 3515 Miskolc, Hungary. bela.viskolcz@uni-miskolc.hu.
  • Jonathan Bones
    Characterisation and Comparability Laboratory, NIBRT - The National Institute for Bioprocessing Research and Training, Foster Avenue, Mount Merrion, Blackrock, Co., Dublin A94 X099, Ireland. jonathan.bones@nibrt.ie.