4.2 Article

Highly sialylated mucin-type glycopeptide from porcine intestinal mucosa after heparin extraction: O-glycan profiling and immunological activity evaluation

Journal

GLYCOCONJUGATE JOURNAL
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 527-537

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10719-021-10014-y

Keywords

O-glycans; Porcine intestinal mucin; Structural characterization; Sialic acid; Immunoregulatory

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31971210, 81991522]
  2. National Science and Technology Major Project for Significant New Drug Development [2018ZX09735004]
  3. Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for the Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology (Qingdao) [2018SDKJ0401, 2018SDKJ0404]
  4. Taishan Schalor Climbing Project [TSPD20210304]

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Pig intestinal mucins contain abundant O-glycans, most of which are Core 3-derived glycans. The high content of sialylated glycans in mucins may play a crucial role in biological processes. Furthermore, porcine intestinal mucin exhibits immunological activity by promoting phagocytosis and proliferation without cytotoxic effects, which can contribute to the development of immunomodulators.
Mucins are the major proteins that distributed on the intestinal mucosa layer and protect the intestine from pathogens infection. The composition of intestinal mucin O-glycans can affect the health of the gastrointestinal tract in pigs. Porcine intestinal mucosa is widely used as the main raw material of heparin extraction. The heparin extraction residues rich in mucins were usually wasted. The structure of mucin derived O-glycans in porcine intestinal mucosa are currently unknown. In this study, we isolated the mucins from the heparin extraction residues and profiled the O-glycans. After heparin extraction, mucin was digested with trypsin, and separated by strong anion exchange chromatography. The mucin derived O-glycans were release by alkaline beta elimination, and analyzed by ultra high performance liquid chromatography-porous graphitized carbon-Fourier transform mass spectrometry (UPLC-PGC-FTMS/MS). Thirty five kinds of O-glycans were identified, most of which were Core 3-derived glycans. In particular, the O-glycans containing sialic acid Neu5Ac accounted for 71.93% of the total O-glycans, which were different from that of other species, including mouse intestine, fish intestine, and porcine colon. The high content sialylated mucin may explain its effect in biological processes. Furthermore, the immunological activity results indicated that the porcine intestinal mucin could promote phagocytosis and proliferation without any cytotoxic effects, which may aid in the development of immunomodulators.

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