A High-Throughput Mass-Spectrometry-Based Assay for Identifying the Biochemical Functions of Putative Glycosidases.
Tianyuan PengGabe NagyJonathan C TrinidadJoy Marie JacksonNicola L B PohlPublished in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2017)
The most commonly employed glycosidase assays rely on bulky ultraviolet or fluorescent tags at the anomeric position in potential carbohydrate substrates, thereby limiting the utility of these assays for broad substrate characterization. Here we report a qualitative mass spectrometry-based glycosidase assay amenable to high-throughput screening for the identification of the biochemical functions of putative glycosidases. The assay utilizes a library of methyl glycosides and is demonstrated on a high-throughput robotic liquid handling system for enzyme substrate screening. Identification of glycosidase biochemical function is achieved through the observation of an appropriate decrease in mass between a potential sugar substrate and its corresponding product by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). In addition to screening known glycosidases, the assay was demonstrated to characterize the biochemical function and enzyme substrate competency of the recombinantly expressed product of a putative glycosidase gene from the thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus.
Keyphrases
- high throughput
- mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- single cell
- capillary electrophoresis
- high performance liquid chromatography
- gas chromatography
- ms ms
- high resolution
- amino acid
- structural basis
- multiple sclerosis
- gene expression
- minimally invasive
- bioinformatics analysis
- living cells
- fluorescent probe
- single molecule