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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter November 18, 2010

Quantitative determination of haptoglobin glycoform variants in psoriasis

  • Bernardetta Maresca , Luisa Cigliano , Maria M. Corsaro , Giuseppina Pieretti , Massimo Natale , Enrico M. Bucci , Fabrizio Dal Piaz , Nicola Balato , Massimiliano Nino , Fabio Ayala and Paolo Abrescia
From the journal Biological Chemistry

Abstract

Haptoglobin is an acute phase glycoprotein, secreted by hepatocytes and other types of cells including keratinocytes. Haptoglobin has been suggested to impair the immune response, inhibit gelatinases in the extracellular matrix and promote angiogenesis, but its role in psoriasis is obscure to date. Changes in haptoglobin glycan structure were observed in several diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate whether haptoglobin displays glycan variations in psoriasis. We found that the pattern of plasma haptoglobin glycoforms, following two-dimensional electrophoresis, exhibited significant quantitative differences in spot intensities between patients and controls. Quantitative and qualitative differences in glycan mass, between patients and controls, were found by mass spectrometry of glycopeptides from tryptic digests of protein isolated from both patients and controls. The number of distinct fucosylated glycoforms of peptides NLFLNHSENATAK and MVSHHNLTTGATLINEQWLLTTAK was higher in patients than in controls, but no fucosylated glycan was detected on peptide VVLHPNYSQ-VDIGLIK in either case. The number of peptides with distinct triantennary and tetraantennary glycans was higher in patients than in controls. Abundance or structure of specific glycans, which are present in haptoglobin from patients and are different or missing in normal haptoglobin, might be associated with disease activity.


Corresponding author

Received: 2010-7-27
Accepted: 2010-9-1
Published Online: 2010-11-18
Published in Print: 2010-12-01

©2010 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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