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Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses

[Image: see text] Inspired by the electron-activated dissociation technique, the most potent tool for glycan characterization, we recently developed free radical reagents for glycan structural elucidation. However, the underlying mechanisms of free radical-induced glycan dissociation remain unclear...

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Autores principales: Fabijanczuk, Kimberly, Yu, Zaikuan Josh, Bakestani, Rose M., Murtada, Rayan, Denton, Nicholas, Gaspar, Kaylee, Otegui, Tara, Acosta, Jose, Kenttämaa, Hilkka I., Eshuis, Henk, Gao, Jinshan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10129047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36715667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04649
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author Fabijanczuk, Kimberly
Yu, Zaikuan Josh
Bakestani, Rose M.
Murtada, Rayan
Denton, Nicholas
Gaspar, Kaylee
Otegui, Tara
Acosta, Jose
Kenttämaa, Hilkka I.
Eshuis, Henk
Gao, Jinshan
author_facet Fabijanczuk, Kimberly
Yu, Zaikuan Josh
Bakestani, Rose M.
Murtada, Rayan
Denton, Nicholas
Gaspar, Kaylee
Otegui, Tara
Acosta, Jose
Kenttämaa, Hilkka I.
Eshuis, Henk
Gao, Jinshan
author_sort Fabijanczuk, Kimberly
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Inspired by the electron-activated dissociation technique, the most potent tool for glycan characterization, we recently developed free radical reagents for glycan structural elucidation. However, the underlying mechanisms of free radical-induced glycan dissociation remain unclear and, therefore, hinder the rational optimization of the free radical reagents and the interpretation of tandem mass spectra, especially the accurate assignment of the relatively low-abundant but information-rich ions. In this work, we selectively incorporate the (13)C and/or (18)O isotopes into cellobiose to study the mechanisms for free radical-induced dissociation of glycans. The eight isotope-labeled cellobioses include 1-(13)C, 3-(13)C, 1′-(13)C, 2′-(13)C, 3′-(13)C, 4′-(13)C, 5′-(13)C, and 1′-(13)C–4-(18)O-cellobioses. Upon one-step collisional activation, cross-ring (X ions), glycosidic bond (Y-, Z-, and B-related ions), and combinational (Y(1) + (0,4)X(0) ion) cleavages are generated. These fragment ions can be unambiguously assigned and confirmed by the mass difference of isotope labeling. Importantly, the relatively low-abundant but information-rich ions, such as (1,5)X(0) + H, (1,4)X(0) + H, (2,4)X(0) + H–OH, Y(1) + (0,4)X(0), (2,5)X(1)-H, (3,5)X(0)-H, (0,3)X(0)-H, (1,4)X(0)-H, and B(2)–3H, are confidently assigned. The mechanisms for the formations of these ions are investigated and supported by quantum chemical calculations. These ions are generally initiated by hydrogen abstraction followed by sequential β-elimination and/or radical migration. Here, the mechanistic study for free radical-induced glycan dissociation allows us to interpret all of the free radical-induced fragment ions accurately and, therefore, enables the differentiation of stereochemical isomers. Moreover, it provides fundamental knowledge for the subsequent development of bioinformatics tools to interpret the complex free radical-induced glycan spectra.
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spelling pubmed-101290472023-04-26 Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses Fabijanczuk, Kimberly Yu, Zaikuan Josh Bakestani, Rose M. Murtada, Rayan Denton, Nicholas Gaspar, Kaylee Otegui, Tara Acosta, Jose Kenttämaa, Hilkka I. Eshuis, Henk Gao, Jinshan Anal Chem [Image: see text] Inspired by the electron-activated dissociation technique, the most potent tool for glycan characterization, we recently developed free radical reagents for glycan structural elucidation. However, the underlying mechanisms of free radical-induced glycan dissociation remain unclear and, therefore, hinder the rational optimization of the free radical reagents and the interpretation of tandem mass spectra, especially the accurate assignment of the relatively low-abundant but information-rich ions. In this work, we selectively incorporate the (13)C and/or (18)O isotopes into cellobiose to study the mechanisms for free radical-induced dissociation of glycans. The eight isotope-labeled cellobioses include 1-(13)C, 3-(13)C, 1′-(13)C, 2′-(13)C, 3′-(13)C, 4′-(13)C, 5′-(13)C, and 1′-(13)C–4-(18)O-cellobioses. Upon one-step collisional activation, cross-ring (X ions), glycosidic bond (Y-, Z-, and B-related ions), and combinational (Y(1) + (0,4)X(0) ion) cleavages are generated. These fragment ions can be unambiguously assigned and confirmed by the mass difference of isotope labeling. Importantly, the relatively low-abundant but information-rich ions, such as (1,5)X(0) + H, (1,4)X(0) + H, (2,4)X(0) + H–OH, Y(1) + (0,4)X(0), (2,5)X(1)-H, (3,5)X(0)-H, (0,3)X(0)-H, (1,4)X(0)-H, and B(2)–3H, are confidently assigned. The mechanisms for the formations of these ions are investigated and supported by quantum chemical calculations. These ions are generally initiated by hydrogen abstraction followed by sequential β-elimination and/or radical migration. Here, the mechanistic study for free radical-induced glycan dissociation allows us to interpret all of the free radical-induced fragment ions accurately and, therefore, enables the differentiation of stereochemical isomers. Moreover, it provides fundamental knowledge for the subsequent development of bioinformatics tools to interpret the complex free radical-induced glycan spectra. American Chemical Society 2023-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10129047/ /pubmed/36715667 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04649 Text en © 2023 American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Fabijanczuk, Kimberly
Yu, Zaikuan Josh
Bakestani, Rose M.
Murtada, Rayan
Denton, Nicholas
Gaspar, Kaylee
Otegui, Tara
Acosta, Jose
Kenttämaa, Hilkka I.
Eshuis, Henk
Gao, Jinshan
Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses
title Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses
title_full Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses
title_fullStr Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses
title_full_unstemmed Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses
title_short Mechanistic Study into Free Radical-Activated Glycan Dissociations through Isotope-Labeled Cellobioses
title_sort mechanistic study into free radical-activated glycan dissociations through isotope-labeled cellobioses
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10129047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36715667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04649
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