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Confident Assignment of Site-Specific Glycosylation in Complex Glycoproteins in a Single Step

[Image: see text] A glycoprotein may contain several sites of glycosylation, each of which is heterogeneous. As a consequence of glycoform diversity and signal suppression from nonglycosylated peptides that ionize more efficiently, typical reversed-phase LC–MS and bottom–up proteomics database searc...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Khatri, Kshitij, Staples, Gregory O., Leymarie, Nancy, Leon, Deborah R., Turiák, Lilla, Huang, Yu, Yip, Shun, Hu, Han, Heckendorf, Christian F., Zaia, Joseph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4184449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25153361
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/pr500506z
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] A glycoprotein may contain several sites of glycosylation, each of which is heterogeneous. As a consequence of glycoform diversity and signal suppression from nonglycosylated peptides that ionize more efficiently, typical reversed-phase LC–MS and bottom–up proteomics database searching workflows do not perform well for identification of site-specific glycosylation for complex glycoproteins. We present an LC–MS system for enrichment, separation, and analysis of glycopeptides from complex glycoproteins (>4 N-glycosylation sequons) in a single step. This system uses an online HILIC enrichment trap prior to reversed-phase C18-MS analysis. We demonstrated the effectiveness of the system using a set of glycoproteins including human transferrin (2 sequons), human alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (5 sequons), and influenza A virus hemagglutinin (9 sequons). The online enrichment renders glycopeptides the most abundant ions detected, thereby facilitating the generation of high-quality data-dependent tandem mass spectra. The tandem mass spectra exhibited product ions from both glycan and peptide backbone dissociation for a majority of the glycopeptides tested using collisionally activated dissociation that served to confidently assign site-specific glycosylation. We demonstrated the value of our system to define site-specific glycosylation using a hemagglutinin containing 9 N-glycosylation sequons from a single HILIC-C18-MS acquisition.