Abstract

N-glycan branching modulates cell surface receptor availability, and its deficiency in mice promotes inflammatory demyelination, reduced myelination, and neurodegeneration. N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) is a rate-limiting substrate for N-glycan branching, but, to our knowledge, endogenous serum levels in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) are unknown. To investigate a marker of endogenous serum GlcNAc levels in patients with MS. A cross-sectional discovery study and cross-sectional confirmatory study were conducted at 2 academic MS centers in the US and Germany. The discovery study recruited 54 patients with MS from an outpatient clinic as well as 66 healthy controls between April 20, 2010, and June 21, 2013. The confirmatory study recruited 180 patients with MS from screening visits at an academic MS study center between April 9, 2007, and February 29, 2016. Serum samples were analyzed from December 2, 2013, to March 2, 2015. Statistical analysis was performed from February 23, 2020, to March 18, 2021. Serum levels of GlcNAc plus its stereoisomers, termed N-acetylhexosamine (HexNAc), were assessed using targeted tandem mass spectroscopy. Secondary outcomes (confirmatory study) comprised imaging and clinical disease markers. The discovery cohort included 66 healthy controls (38 women; mean [SD] age, 42 [20] years), 33 patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS; 25 women; mean [SD] age, 50 [11] years), and 21 patients with progressive MS (PMS; 14 women; mean [SD] age, 55 [7] years). The confirmatory cohort included 125 patients with RRMS (83 women; mean [SD] age, 40 [9] years) and 55 patients with PMS (22 women; mean [SD] age, 49 [80] years). In the discovery cohort, the mean (SD) serum level of GlcNAc plus its stereoisomers (HexNAc) was 710 (174) nM in healthy controls and marginally reduced in patients with RRMS (mean [SD] level, 682 [173] nM; P = .04), whereas patients with PMS displayed markedly reduced levels compared with healthy controls (mean [SD] level, 548 [101] nM; P = 9.55 × 10-9) and patients with RRMS (P = 1.83 × 10-4). The difference between patients with RRMS (mean [SD] level, 709 [193] nM) and those with PMS (mean [SD] level, 405 [161] nM; P = 7.6 × 10-18) was confirmed in the independent confirmatory cohort. Lower HexNAc serum levels correlated with worse expanded disability status scale scores (ρ = -0.485; P = 4.73 × 10-12), lower thalamic volume (t = 1.7; P = .04), and thinner retinal nerve fiber layer (B = 0.012 [SE = 7.5 × 10-11]; P = .008). Low baseline serum HexNAc levels correlated with a greater percentage of brain volume loss at 18 months (t = 1.8; P = .04). This study suggests that deficiency of GlcNAc plus its stereoisomers (HexNAc) may be a biomarker for PMS. Previous preclinical, human genetic, and ex vivo human mechanistic studies revealed that N-glycan branching and/or GlcNAc may reduce proinflammatory responses, promote myelin repair, and decrease neurodegeneration. Combined, the data suggest that GlcNAc deficiency may be associated with progressive disease and neurodegeneration in patients with MS.

Highlights

  • Thalamic volume was determined as summary volume from both hemispheres using FIRST (FSL 5.0, FMRIB Software Library, Oxford, UK)[4] on MPRAGE scans and normalized using a brainsize normalization factor output from FSL SIENAX (FSL, FMRIB Software Library, Oxford, UK)[5] for each individual brain

  • Targeted Liquid chromatography - tandem mass spectroscopy (LC-MS/MS) All serum samples were analyzed in a blinded fashion by the central mass spec laboratory in Toronto

  • Correlation between age or sex and serum HexNAc levels were analyzed with linear regression models for age and Welch’s t-test for sex in HC

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Thalamic volume was determined as summary volume from both hemispheres using FIRST (FSL 5.0, FMRIB Software Library, Oxford, UK)[4] on MPRAGE scans and normalized using a brainsize normalization factor output from FSL SIENAX (FSL, FMRIB Software Library, Oxford, UK)[5] for each individual brain. Targeted Liquid chromatography - tandem mass spectroscopy (LC-MS/MS) All serum samples were analyzed in a blinded fashion by the central mass spec laboratory in Toronto. Serum samples for metabolomics analysis were prepared as described previously.[8] Briefly, 50 μL serum (stored at -80oC) and 200μl ice cold extraction solvent (40% acetonitrile: 40% methanol: 20% H2O), were vortexed for 2 minutes, shaken in an Eppendorf shaker (Thermomixer R) at 1400 rpm, 4°C for 1 hour and centrifuged at 4°C for 10 minutes at ~18,000 x g in an Eppendorf microfuge.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call