4.4 Article

A potential pitfall in 18O-based N-linked glycosylation site mapping

Journal

RAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 674-682

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/rcm.2874

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P41RR018502, P41RR005351] Funding Source: Medline

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A common procedure for identifying N-linked glycosylation sites involves tryptic digestion of the glycoprotein, followed by the conversion of glycosylated asparagine residues into O-18-labeled aspartic acids by PNGase F digestion in O-18 water. The 3 Da mass tag created by this process is readily observable by liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) analysis, and is often used to identify the sites of N-linked glycosylation. While using this procedure, we noticed that 60% of the asparagines identified as being glycosylated were not part of the consensus sequence required for N-linked glycosylation, and thus were not biologically possible. Investigation into the source of this unacceptably high false positive rate demonstrated that even after reversed-phase cleanup and heat denaturation, the trypsin used for proteolysis was still active and led to the incorporation of O-18 into the C-termini of the peptides during the deglycosylation step. The resulting mass shift accounted for most of the false positive sites, as the database search algorithm confused it with an O-18-labeled Asp residue near the C-terminus of a peptide. This problem can be overcome by eliminating trypsin from the solution prior to performing the deglycosylation process, by resuspending the peptides in natural abundance water following deglycosylation, or by allowing O-18 incorporation into the C-terminus as a variable modification during the database search. These methods have been demonstrated on a model protein, and are applicable to the analyses of glycoproteins that are digested with trypsin or another serine protease prior to enzymatic release of the carbohydrate side chains. This study should alert investigators in the field to this potential and unexpected pitfall and provide strategies to overcome this phenomenon. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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