4.6 Article

Characterizing the O-glycosylation landscape of human plasma, platelets, and endothelial cells

Journal

BLOOD ADVANCES
Volume 1, Issue 7, Pages 429-442

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2016002121

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Funding

  1. The Danish Research Councils (Sapere Aude Research Leader grant )
  2. Mizutani Foundation
  3. Kirsten og Freddy Johansen Fonden
  4. A. P. Moller og Hustru Chastine Mc- Kinney Mollers Fond til Almene Formaal
  5. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  6. Danish Strategic Research Council
  7. Lundbeck foundation
  8. University of Copenhagen [CDO2016]
  9. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF107]
  10. Talent Grant
  11. Lundbeck Foundation [R5-2006-542] Funding Source: researchfish

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The hemostatic system comprises platelet aggregation, coagulation, and fibrinolysis, and is critical to the maintenance of vascular integrity. Multiple studies indicate that glycans play important roles in the hemostatic system; however, most investigations have focused on N-glycans because of the complexity of O-glycan analysis. Here we performed the first systematic analysis of native-O-glycosylation using lectin affinity chromatography coupled to liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS)/MS to determine the precise location of O-glycans in human plasma, platelets, and endothelial cells, which coordinately regulate hemostasis. We identified the hitherto largest O-glycoproteome from native tissue with a total of 649 glycoproteins and 1123 nonambiguous O-glycosites, demonstrating that O-glycosylation is a ubiquitous modification of extracellular proteins. Investigation of the general properties of O-glycosylation established that it is a heterogeneous modification, frequently occurring at low density within disordered regions in a cell-dependent manner. Using an unbiased screen to identify associations between O-glycosites and protein annotations we found that O-glycans were over-represented close (6 15 amino acids) to tandem repeat regions, protease cleavage sites, within propeptides, and located on a select group of protein domains. The importance of O-glycosites in proximity to proteolytic cleavage sites was further supported by in vitro peptide assays demonstrating that proteolysis of key hemostatic proteins can be inhibited by the presence of O-glycans. Collectively, these data illustrate the global properties of native O-glycosylation and provide the requisite roadmap for future biomarker and structure-function studies.

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