Abstract

Serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test is the current gold standard for screening and diagnosis of prostate cancer (PCa), while overdiagnosis and overtreatment are social problems. In order to improve the specificity and exclude a false positive diagnosis in PSA test, PCa-specific glycosylation subtypes of PSA were explored using in-depth quantitative profiling of PSA glycoforms based on mass spectrometric oxonium ion monitoring technology. As a result of analysis using sera from 15 PCa or 15 benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) patients whose PSA levels were in the "gray zone" (4.0-10.0 ng/mL), 52 glycan structures on PSA were quantitatively observed. We found that abundance of multisialylated LacdiNAc (GalNAcβ1-4GlcNAc) structures were significantly upregulated in the PCa group compared to the BPH group. A couple of those glycoforms were then extracted and subjected to establish a novel PCa-specific diagnosis model (PSA G-index). When the diagnostic power was assessed using an independent validation sample set (15 PCa and 15 BPH patients in the PSA gray zone), an AUC of PSA G-index was 1.00, while that of total PSA or PSA f/T ratio was 0.50 or 0.60, respectively. Moreover, both PSA glycoforms showed significant correlation with Gleason scores. Lectin histochemical staining analysis also showed that PCa cells overexpressed glycoproteins containing LacdiNAc and sialic acids moieties. Thus, PSA G-index could serve as not only an effective secondary screening method to exclude false positive diagnosis in PSA screening, but also a potential grading biomarker for PCa.

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