Gold nanoparticle-glutathione-functionalized porous graphene oxide-based hydrophilic beads for the selective enrichment of N-linked glycopeptides.
Jie LiWeiwei HuanKaiwei XuBuchuan WangJingshu ZhangBinbin ZhuMinjie WuJianhua WangPublished in: Mikrochimica acta (2020)
A three-dimensional structured porous graphene oxide-polyethylenimine bead (pGP) is synthesized for immobilizing gold nanoparticles and modifying glutathione molecules (denoted as pGP/AuG). The pGP/AuG has open pore structure, honeycomb-like channels, and excellent hydrophilicity. By taking advantages of the porous structure, abundant binding sites, and multivalent interactions between glycopeptides and both glutathione molecules and free amino groups, the pGP/AuG is adopted to the selective enrichment of N-linked glycopeptides with low limit of detection (2 fmol), high enrichment selectivity (1:500), binding capacity (333.3 mg/g), recovery yield (91.3 ± 2.1%), and repeatability (< 6.0% RSD) using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry detection method. Furthermore, the practical applicability of pGP/AuG is evaluated, in which 209 N-glycosylated peptides corresponding to 128 N-glycosylated proteins are identified from 1 μL human serum in three independent analysis procedures, suggesting the great potential for application in glycoproteome fields.Graphical abstract Schematic presentation of preparation for porous graphene oxide-based hydrophilic beads (pGP/AuG) with honeycomb-like microstructure. The pGP/AuG was successfully used for enriching and identifying glycopeptides from actual biological sample.