Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Impact of infection on proteome-wide glycosylation revealed by distinct signatures for bacterial and viral pathogens

CollaboratorsPosfay Barbe, Klara
Published iniScience, vol. 26, no. 8, 107257
Publication date2023-08-18
First online date2023-07-04
Abstract

Mechanisms of infection and pathogenesis have predominantly been studied based on differential gene or protein expression. Less is known about posttranslational modifications, which are essential for protein functional diversity. We applied an innovative glycoproteomics method to study the systemic proteome-wide glycosylation in response to infection. The protein site-specific glycosylation was characterized in plasma derived from well-defined controls and patients. We found 3862 unique features, of which we identified 463 distinct intact glycopeptides, that could be mapped to more than 30 different proteins. Statistical analyses were used to derive a glycopeptide signature that enabled significant differentiation between patients with a bacterial or viral infection. Furthermore, supported by a machine learning algorithm, we demonstrated the ability to identify the causative pathogens based on the distinctive host blood plasma glycopeptide signatures. These results illustrate that glycoproteomics holds enormous potential as an innovative approach to improve the interpretation of relevant biological changes in response to infection.

Keywords
  • Glycobiology
  • Glycomics
  • Health sciences
  • Immunology
Citation (ISO format)
WILLEMS, Esther et al. Impact of infection on proteome-wide glycosylation revealed by distinct signatures for bacterial and viral pathogens. In: iScience, 2023, vol. 26, n° 8, p. 107257. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.107257
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Secondary files (1)
Identifiers
Journal ISSN2589-0042
16views
8downloads

Technical informations

Creation09/24/2024 10:25:54 AM
First validation10/09/2024 11:43:15 AM
Update time10/30/2024 11:31:37 AM
Status update10/30/2024 11:31:37 AM
Last indexation10/30/2024 11:32:25 AM
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack