MALDI FTMS Imaging Mass Spectrometry of N-glycans as Tissue Biomarkers of Cancer
Applications | 2017 | BrukerInstrumentation
N-glycosylation is a widespread post-translational modification critical for protein folding, stability and cell–cell interactions. Alterations in N-glycan structures are intimately linked to cancer progression, influencing immune responses, extracellular matrix remodeling and tumor–stroma communication. Imaging N-glycans in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues unlocks valuable biomarker information from archived clinical specimens, supporting improved diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutic targeting.
This study presents a complete workflow for spatial mapping of N-glycans in FFPE thyroid cancer sections using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry (MALDI FTMS) on a 7 tesla solariX platform. Focusing on anaplastic thyroid carcinoma, the aim was to detect, identify and quantify diverse glycoforms across tumor, necrotic and adjacent non-tumor regions, demonstrating the method’s sensitivity and specificity.
A 5 µm FFPE section of anaplastic thyroid cancer was deparaffinized, subjected to acidic antigen retrieval, then coated with PNGase F via an automated sprayer. Following in situ enzymatic release of N-glycans at 37 °C under humid conditions, α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid matrix was applied. Imaging was performed in positive ion mode with 150 µm pixel spacing, 200 laser shots per pixel, spanning m/z 500–5,000. A transient length of 1.2 s achieved resolving power ~85 000 at m/z 1 850. Data processing involved FlexImaging for peak mapping, GlycoWorkbench for glycan annotation within 5 ppm tolerance, and SCiLS Lab segmentation with bisecting k-means and Manhattan metric. Statistical filtering used Wilcoxon rank sum (p≤1×10⁻³) and ROC analysis (AUC≤0.8).
Over 111 distinct N-glycan species were detected as sodium adducts, including high-mannose, hybrid, complex and sialylated structures. The solariX’s cooled source preserved labile sialic acids, yielding equivalent sensitivity for sialylated and non-sialylated glycans. The workflow spanned m/z 1 257.4 (Man5) to m/z 4 000.4 (fucosylated tetraantennary polyLacNAc). SCiLS segmentation correlated glycan distributions with pathologist-annotated regions, revealing:
The described MALDI FTMS imaging workflow on a 7 T solariX provides a robust, sensitive and high-resolution approach for mapping N-glycans in FFPE tumor tissues. Preservation of sialic acids and broad m/z coverage enable comprehensive profiling of glycan alterations within the tumor microenvironment. This platform offers a powerful tool for glycomics research and biomarker discovery in cancer and beyond.
MALDI, MS Imaging, LC/MS, LC/Ultra-HRMS
IndustriesClinical Research
ManufacturerBruker
Summary
Importance of the Topic
N-glycosylation is a widespread post-translational modification critical for protein folding, stability and cell–cell interactions. Alterations in N-glycan structures are intimately linked to cancer progression, influencing immune responses, extracellular matrix remodeling and tumor–stroma communication. Imaging N-glycans in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues unlocks valuable biomarker information from archived clinical specimens, supporting improved diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutic targeting.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study presents a complete workflow for spatial mapping of N-glycans in FFPE thyroid cancer sections using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry (MALDI FTMS) on a 7 tesla solariX platform. Focusing on anaplastic thyroid carcinoma, the aim was to detect, identify and quantify diverse glycoforms across tumor, necrotic and adjacent non-tumor regions, demonstrating the method’s sensitivity and specificity.
Methodology
A 5 µm FFPE section of anaplastic thyroid cancer was deparaffinized, subjected to acidic antigen retrieval, then coated with PNGase F via an automated sprayer. Following in situ enzymatic release of N-glycans at 37 °C under humid conditions, α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid matrix was applied. Imaging was performed in positive ion mode with 150 µm pixel spacing, 200 laser shots per pixel, spanning m/z 500–5,000. A transient length of 1.2 s achieved resolving power ~85 000 at m/z 1 850. Data processing involved FlexImaging for peak mapping, GlycoWorkbench for glycan annotation within 5 ppm tolerance, and SCiLS Lab segmentation with bisecting k-means and Manhattan metric. Statistical filtering used Wilcoxon rank sum (p≤1×10⁻³) and ROC analysis (AUC≤0.8).
Used Instrumentation
- TM-Sprayer (HTX Imaging) for enzyme/matrix deposition
- 7 T solariX MALDI FTMS with dual ESI/MALDI source
- Smartbeam II laser (minimum focus setting)
- FlexImaging software v4.1 (Bruker Daltonics)
- GlycoWorkbench 2.0 for glycan identification
- SCiLS Lab software 2016b (v4.01.8705) for segmentation and statistics
Main Results and Discussion
Over 111 distinct N-glycan species were detected as sodium adducts, including high-mannose, hybrid, complex and sialylated structures. The solariX’s cooled source preserved labile sialic acids, yielding equivalent sensitivity for sialylated and non-sialylated glycans. The workflow spanned m/z 1 257.4 (Man5) to m/z 4 000.4 (fucosylated tetraantennary polyLacNAc). SCiLS segmentation correlated glycan distributions with pathologist-annotated regions, revealing:
- Elevated Man9 in adjacent non-tumor tissue vs. anaplastic regions
- Biantennary structures predominating in necrotic zones
- Progressive increase of fucosylated tetraantennary glycans in tumor and necrosis
Benefits and Practical Application
- Enables high-throughput screening of archived FFPE biobanks for glycan biomarkers
- Delivers spatially resolved molecular data without tissue destruction
- Supports discovery of glycosylation-based diagnostic and prognostic markers
- Facilitates investigation of glycan-mediated mechanisms in cancer biology
Future Trends and Opportunities
- Integration with multi-omics and imaging modalities (e.g., immunohistochemistry, spatial transcriptomics)
- Refinement of spatial resolution toward single-cell glycomics
- Targeted labeling of glycan epitopes to enhance specificity
- Application to other disease models (neurodegeneration, infectious diseases)
- Incorporation of machine learning for automated glycan pattern recognition
Conclusion
The described MALDI FTMS imaging workflow on a 7 T solariX provides a robust, sensitive and high-resolution approach for mapping N-glycans in FFPE tumor tissues. Preservation of sialic acids and broad m/z coverage enable comprehensive profiling of glycan alterations within the tumor microenvironment. This platform offers a powerful tool for glycomics research and biomarker discovery in cancer and beyond.
References
- Moremen KW, Tiemeyer M, Nairn AV. 2012. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 13:448–462.
- Stanley P, Schachter H, Taniguchi N. 2009. N-Glycans. In Essentials of Glycobiology, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
- Varki A. 2017. Glycobiology 27:3–49.
- Pinho SS, Reis CA. 2015. Nature Reviews Cancer 15:540–555.
- Powers TW et al. 2014. PLoS ONE 9:e106255.
- Drake RR et al. 2017. Advances in Cancer Research 134:85–116.
- Gorzolka K, Walch A. 2014. Histology and Histopathology 29:1365–1367.
- Ceroni A et al. 2008. Journal of Proteome Research 7:1650–1659.
- Lin RY. 2011. Nature Reviews Endocrinology 7:609–616.
- O’Connor PB, Mirgorodskaya E, Costello CE. 2002. Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 13:402–407.
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