4.7 Article

Enhanced Mass Spectrometric Mapping of the Human GalNAc-type O-Glycoproteome with SimpleCells

Journal

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages 932-944

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/mcp.O112.021972

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Kirsten og Freddy Johansen Fonden
  2. A. P. Moller og Hustru Chastine Mc-Kinney Mollers Fond til Almene Formaal
  3. Carlsberg Foundation
  4. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  5. Alfred Benzon Foundation
  6. Danish Research Councils
  7. Program of Excellence from the University of Copenhagen
  8. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF107]

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Characterizing protein GalNAc-type O-glycosylation has long been a major challenge, and as a result, our understanding of this glycoproteome is particularly poor. Recently, we presented a novel strategy for high throughput identification of O-GalNAc glycosites using zinc finger nuclease gene-engineered SimpleCell lines producing homogeneous truncated O-glycosylation. Total lysates of cells were trypsinized and subjected to lectin affinity chromatography enrichment, followed by identification of GalNAc O-glycopeptides by nLC-MS/MS, with electron transfer dissociation employed to specify sites of O-glycosylation. Here, we demonstrate a substantial improvement in the SimpleCell strategy by including an additional stage of lectin affinity chromatography on secreted glycoproteins from culture media (secretome) and by incorporating pre-fractionation of affinity-enriched glycopeptides via IEF before nLC-MS/MS. We applied these improvements to three human SimpleCells studied previously, and each yielded a substantial increase in the number of O-glycoproteins and O-glycosites identified. We found that analysis of the secretome was an important independent factor for increasing identifications, suggesting that further substantial improvements can also be sought through analysis of subcellular organelle fractions. In addition, we uncovered a substantial nonoverlapping set of O-glycoproteins and O-glycosites using an alternative protease digestion (chymotrypsin). In total, the improvements led to identification of 259 glycoproteins, of which 152 (59%) were novel compared with our previous strategy using the same three cell lines. With respect to individual glycosites, we identified a total of 856 sites, of which 508 (59%) were novel compared with our previous strategy; this includes four new identifications of O-GalNAc attached to tyrosine. Furthermore, we uncovered similar to 220 O-glycosites wherein the peptides were clearly identified, but the glycosites could not be unambiguously assigned to specific positions. The improved strategy should greatly facilitate high throughput characterization of the human GalNAc-type O-glycoproteome as well as be applicable to analysis of other O-glycoproteomes. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 12: 10.1074/mcp.O112.021972, 932-944, 2013.

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