Selective detection of disease-associated changes in the glycocalyx is an emerging field in modern targeted therapies. Detecting minor glycan changes on the cell surface is a challenge exacerbated by the lack of correspondence between cellular DNA/RNA and glycan structures. We demonstrate that multivalent displays of lectins on DNA-barcoded phages-liquid lectin array (LiLA)-detect subtle differences in density of glycans on cells. LiLA constructs displaying 73 copies of diCBM40 (CBM) lectin per virion (φ-CBM73) exhibit non-linear ON/OFF-like recognition of sialoglycans on the surface of normal and cancer cells. A high-valency φ-CBM290 display, or soluble CBM protein, cannot amplify the subtle differences detected by φ-CBM73. Similarly, multivalent displays of CBM and Siglec-7 detect differences in the glycocalyx between stem-like and non-stem populations in cancer. Multivalent display of lectins offer in situ detection of minor differences in glycocalyx in cells both in vitro and in vivo not feasible to currently available technologies.
Keywords: DNA barcoding; LiLA; cell surface; glycan-binding proteins; glycocalyx; lectin array; multivalency; phage; profiling.
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