The Plasma Glycome Differences Between Women with PCOS and Healthy Controls
Madison Holman, Sophie Jie Li, Mary M. Ahern, L. Renee Ruhaak, Siddika Karakas, Sridevi Krishnan

TL;DR
This study finds differences in blood sugar-related molecules in women with PCOS compared to healthy women, suggesting a potential link to hormonal imbalances.
Contribution
The study reports novel plasma glycome differences in PCOS, including elevated tetraantennary and reduced hybrid-type N-glycans.
Findings
Women with PCOS had higher body weight, body fat, and fasting leptin, insulin, and glucose levels.
Hybrid-type glycans were reduced, while tetraantennary glycans were modestly increased in PCOS patients.
Tetraantennary glycans correlated with higher testosterone levels in PCOS.
Abstract
While PCOS research has extensively explored genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic milieus, our study examines the plasma glycome, comparing women with PCOS to age-matched healthy controls. In this observational study, n = 47 women with PCOS were screened and enrolled at the UC Davis Health campus; the comparator group constituted of n = 25 age-matched healthy women. During a study visit, body weight and body composition were measured, and fasted plasma samples were obtained to measure glucose, insulin, circulating lipids, and leptin, among other parameters, in both groups. In addition, in the PCOS group, circulating androgens and other endocrine hormones were measured. The plasma glycome was measured using a UHPLC-MS protocol. As expected, women with PCOS had higher body weight (p < 0.01), body fat (p = 0.004), fasting leptin (p = 0.01), insulin (p = 0.003), and glucose…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOvarian function and disorders · Menopause: Health Impacts and Treatments · Hormonal and reproductive studies
