Comprehensive Glycomic Approach Reveals Novel Low-Molecular-Weight Blood Group-Specific Glycans in Serum and Cerebrospinal Fluid.
Jun-Ichi FurukawaHisatoshi HanamatsuIkuko YokotaMegumi HirayamaTomohiro AndoHiroyuki KobayashiShunsuke OhnishiNobuaki MiuraKazue OkadaShota SakaiKohei YuyamaYasuyuki IgarashiMakoto ItoYasuro ShinoharaNaoya SakamotoPublished in: Journal of proteome research (2021)
ABO blood antigens on the human red blood cell membrane as well as different cells in various human tissues have been thoroughly studied. Anti-A and -B antibodies of IgM are present in serum/plasma, but blood group-specific glyco-antigens have not been extensively described. In this study, we performed comprehensive and quantitative serum glycomic analyses of various glycoconjugates and free oligosaccharides in all blood groups. Our comprehensive glycomic approach revealed that blood group-specific antigens in serum/plasma are predominantly present on glycosphingolipids on lipoproteins rather than glycoproteins. Expression of the ABO antigens on glycosphingolipids depends not only on blood type but also on secretor status. Blood group-specific glycans in serum/plasma were classified as type I, whereas those on RBCs had different structures including hexose and hexosamine residues. Analysis of free oligosaccharides revealed that low-molecular-weight blood group-specific glycans, commonly containing lacto-N-difucotetraose, were expressed in serum/plasma according to blood group. Furthermore, comprehensive glycomic analysis in human cerebrospinal fluid showed that many kinds of free oligosaccharides were highly expressed, and low-molecular-weight blood group-specific glycans, which existed in plasma from the same individuals, were present. Our findings provide the first evidence for low-molecular-weight blood group-specific glycans in both serum/plasma and cerebrospinal fluid.