4.5 Article

A serial lectin approach to the mucin-type O-glycoproteome of Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 7, Issue 18, Pages 3264-3277

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200600793

Keywords

Drosophila; glycoproteome; O-glycosylation

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Identification of mucin-type O-glycosylated proteins with known functions in model organisms like Drosophila could provide keys to elucidate functions of the O-glycan moiety and proteomic analyses of O-glycoproteins in higher eukaryotes remain a. challenge due to structural heterogeneity and a lack of efficient tools for their specific isolation. Here we report a strategy to evaluate the O-glycosylation potential of the embryonal hemocyte-like Drosophila Schneider 2 (S2) cell line by expression of recombinant glycosylation probes derived from tandem repeats of the human mucin MUC1 or of the Drosophila salivary gland protein Sgs1. We obtained evidence that mucin-type O-glycosylation in S2 cells grown under serum-free conditions is restricted to the Tn-antigen (GaINAca-Ser/Thr) and the T-antigen (Gal beta 1-3GaINAc alpha-Ser/Thr) and this structural homogeneity enables unique glycoproteomic strategies. We present a label-free strategy for the isolation, profiling and analysis of O-glycosylated proteins consisting of serial lectin affinity capture, 2-DE-based glycoprotein analysis by O-glycan specific mAbs and protein identification by MALDIMS. Protein identity and O-glycosylation was confirmed by ESI-MS/MS with detection of diagnostic sugar oxonium-ion fragments. Using this strategy, we established 2-D reference maps and identified 21 secreted and intracellular mucin-type O-glycoproteins. Our results show that Drosophila S2 cells express O-glycoproteins involved in a wide range of biological functions including proteins of the extracellular matrix (Laminin gamma-chain, Peroxidasin and Glutactin), pathogen recognition proteins (Gnbp1), stress response proteins (Glycoprotein 93), secreted proteases (Matrix-metalloprotease 1 and various trypsin-like serine proteases), protease inhibitors (Serpin 27A) and proteins of unknown function.

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