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Facile removal of high mannose structures prior to extracting complex type N‐glycans from de‐N‐glycosylated peptides retained by C18 solid phase to allow more efficient glycomic mapping
Author(s) -
Lin ChiHung,
Kuo ChuWei,
Jarvis Donald L.,
Khoo KayHooi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
proteomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.26
H-Index - 167
eISSN - 1615-9861
pISSN - 1615-9853
DOI - 10.1002/pmic.201300343
Subject(s) - glycomics , glycan , chemistry , chromatography , fucosylation , mannose , elution , mass spectrometry , formic acid , peptide , glycosylation , biochemistry , glycoprotein
The relative amount of high mannose structures within an N‐glycomic pool differs from one source to another, but quite often it predominates over the larger size complex type structures carrying biologically important glyco‐epitopes. An efficient method to separate these two classes of N‐glycans would significantly aid in detecting the lower abundant components by MS. Capitalizing on an initial observation that only high mannose type structures were recovered in the flow‐through fraction when peptide‐N‐glycosidase F digested peptides were passed through a C18 cartridge in 0.1% formic acid, we demonstrated here that native complex type N‐glycans can be retained by C18 cartridge and to be efficiently separated from both the smaller high mannose type structures, as well as de‐N‐glycosylated peptides by stepwise elution with increasing ACN concentration. The weak retention of the largely hydrophilic N‐glycans on C18 resin is dependent not only on size but also increased by the presence of α6‐fucosylation. This was shown by comparing the resulting N‐glycomic profiles of the washed and low‐ACN eluted fractions derived from both a human cancer cell line and an insect cell line.

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