Native Mass Spectrometry Meets Glycomics: Resolving Structural Detail and Occupancy of Glycans on Intact Glycoproteins.
Siyun ChenDi WuCarol V RobinsonWeston B StruwePublished in: Analytical chemistry (2021)
Glycoproteins are inherently heterogeneous and therefore resolving structures in their entirety remains a major challenge in structural biology. Native mass spectrometry has transformed our ability to study glycoproteins, and despite advances in high-resolution instrumentation, there are comparatively a few studies demonstrating its potential with data largely limited to an overall measure of monosaccharide composition for all glycans across glycosylation sites for a given protein. Clearly, these readouts lack glycan topology information, namely, monosaccharide linkage and glycan branching. To address this deficiency, we developed a new approach that joins native mass spectrometry with glycan exoglycosidase sequencing, the combination of which provides remarkable glycoprotein structural details. We show how N-glycan branching, terminal fucosylation, LacNAc extensions, and N- and O-glycan occupancy (i.e., total number of glycans) can be directly characterized on intact glycoproteins with minimal sample preparation. Taken together, native exoglycosidase sequencing mass spectrometry (NES-MS) notably improves our ability to characterize protein glycosylation, addressing a significant need in structural biology that will enable new routes to understand glycoprotein function.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- cell surface
- high resolution
- liquid chromatography
- gas chromatography
- capillary electrophoresis
- high performance liquid chromatography
- single cell
- binding protein
- gene expression
- electronic health record
- big data
- protein protein
- molecularly imprinted
- hepatitis c virus
- dna methylation
- multiple sclerosis
- hiv testing
- small molecule
- human immunodeficiency virus
- ms ms
- healthcare
- solid phase extraction
- men who have sex with men