Electrophoresis, Vol.30, No.15, 2617-2623, 2009
Analysis of gamma-globulin mobility on routine clinical CE equipment: Exploring its molecular basis and potential clinical utility
A study was conducted on the variability of gamma-globulin mobility in serum protein electrophoresis and its molecular basis. We found that the migration time of gamma-globulins can be reproducibly determined (CV = 1.1%) on clinical CE equipment. Moreover, we found a significant difference (p<0.001) in the migration of gamma-globulins between chronic liver disease patients (n = 98) and a healthy reference group (n = 47). Serum immunoglobulins were purified from these patients' sera using protein L-agarose and their glycosylation was studied using CE on a DNA sequencer. This glycomics approach revealed that several non-sialylated N-glycans show a moderate Pearson correlation coefficient (r = 0.2-0.4) with the migration time of gamma-globulins. Their sialylated structures correlate negatively (r = -0.2 to -0.3). Immunoglobulins are significantly more sialylated in the healthy reference group compared with the patients (p<0.001). We estimated that sialylation heterogeneity contributes about 36% to the molecular variance (carbohydrates and amino-acid composition) that affects the electrophoretic mobility of immunoglobulins. This is the first report on the migration time of gamma-globulins on a clinical CE instrument and its potential clinical value to the routinely analyzed serum protein CE profiles.