4.5 Article

Quantitative O-glycomics based on improvement of the one-pot method for nonreductive O-glycan release and simultaneous stable isotope labeling with 1-(d0/d5)phenyl-3-methyl-5-pyrazolone followed by mass spectrometric analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS
Volume 150, Issue -, Pages 18-30

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jprot.2016.08.012

Keywords

O-glycosylation; quantitative glycomics; stable isotope labeling; one-pot procedure; 1-(d(0)/d(5))phenyl-3-methyl-5-pyrazolone (d(0)/d(5)-PMP); MS

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31370804, 31170773, 21375103, 21305117, 31300678]
  2. Scientific Research Foundation of Northwest University for Natural Science [15NW18]

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Rapid, simple and versatile methods for quantitative analysis of glycoprotein O-glycans are urgently required for current studies on protein O-glycosylation patterns and the search for disease O-glycan biomarkers. Relative quantitation of O-glycans using stable isotope labeling followed by mass spectrometric analysis represents an ideal and promising technique. However, it is hindered by the shortage of reliable nonreductive O-glycan release methods as well as the too large or too small inconstant mass difference between the light and heavy isotope form derivatives of O-glycans, which results in difficulties during the recognition and quantitative analysis of O-glycans by mass spectrometry. Herein we report a facile and versatile O-glycan relative quantification strategy, based on an improved one-pot method that can quantitatively achieve nonreductive release and in situ chromophoric labeling of intact mucin-type O-glycans in one step. In this study, the one-pot method is optimized and applied for quantitative O-glycan release and tagging with either non-deuterated (d(0)-) or deuterated (d(5)-) 1-phenyl-3-methyl-5-pyrazolone (PMP). The obtained O-glycan derivatives feature a permanent 10-Da mass difference between the d(0)- and d(5)-PMP forms, allowing complete discrimination and comparative quantification of these isotopically labeled O-glycans by mass spectrometric techniques. Moreover, the d(0)- and d(5)-PMP derivatives of O-glycans also have a relatively high hydrophobicity as well as a strong DV adsorption, especially suitable for high-resolution separation and high-sensitivity detection by RP-HPLC-UV. We have refined the conditions for the one-pot reaction as well as the corresponding sample purification approach. The good quantitation feasibility, reliability and linearity of this strategy have been verified using bovine fetuin and porcine stomach mucin as model O-glycoproteins. Additionally, we have also successfully applied this method to the quantitative O-glycomic comparison between perch and salmon eggs by ESI-MS, MS/MS and online RP-HPLC-UV-ESI-MS/MS, demonstrating its excellent applicability to various complex biological samples. Biological significance: O-Linked glycoproteins, generated via a widely existing glycosylation modification process on serine (Ser) or threonine (Thr) residues of nascent proteins, play essential roles in a series of biological processes. As a type of informational molecule, the O-glycans of these glycoproteins participate directly in these biological mechanisms. Thus, the characteristic differences or changes of O-glycans in expression level usually relate to pathologies of many diseases and represent an important opportunity to uncover the functional mechanisms of various glycoprotein O-glycans. The novel strategy introduced here provides a simple and versatile analytical method for the precise quantitation of glycoprotein O-glycans by mass spectrometry, enabling rapid evaluation of the differences or changes of O-glycans in expression level. It is attractive for the field of quantitative/comparative O-glycomics, which has great significance for exploring the complex structure-function relationship of O-glycans, as well as for the search of O-glycan biomarkers of some major diseases and O-glycan related targets of some drugs. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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