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Exploring the glycan repertoire of genetically modified mice by isolation and profiling of the major glycan classes and nano-NMR analysis of glycan mixtures

Journal

GLYCOBIOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 669-689

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/glycob/10.7.669

Keywords

glycan; mice; glycosyltransferase; NMR

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [P01 HL107150, P01 HL57345] Funding Source: Medline

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The production of mice with genetic alterations in glycosyltransferases has highlighted the need to isolate and study complex mixtures of the major classes of oligosaccharides (glycans) from intact tissues. We have found that nano-NMR spectroscopy of whole mixtures of N- and O-glycans can complement IIPLC profiling methods for elucidating structural details. Working toward obtaining such glycan mixtures from mouse tissues, we decided to develop an approach to isolate not only N- and O-glycans, bur also to separate out glycosphingolipids, glycosaminoglycans and glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchors. We describe here a comprehensive Glycan Isolation Protocol that is based primarily upon the physicochemical characteristics of the molecules, and requires only commonly available reagents and equipment. Using radiolabeled internal tracers, we show that recovery of each major class of glycans is as good or better than with conventional approaches for isolating individual classes, and that cross-contamination is minimal. The recovered glycans are of sufficient purity to provide a glycoprofile of a cell type or tissue. We applied this approach to compare the N- and O-glycans from wild type mouse tissues with those from mice genetically deficient in glycosyltransferases. N- and O-glycan mixtures from organs of mice deficient in ST6Gal-I (CMP-Sia:Gal beta 1--4GlcNAc alpha 2-6 sialyltransferase) were studied by the nano-NMR spectroscopy approach, showing no detectable alpha 2-6-linked sialic acids. Thus, ST6Gal-I is likely responsible for generating most or all of these residues in normal mice. Similar studies indicate that this linkage is very rare in ganglioside glycans, even in wild-type tissues. In mice deficient in GalNacT-8 (UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide O-Ser/Thr GalNAc transferase 8), HPLC profiling indicates that O-glycans persist in the thymus in large amounts, without a major change in overall profile, suggesting that other enzymes can synthesize the GalNAc-O-Ser/Thr linkage in this tissue. These results demonstrate the applicability of nano-NMR spectroscopy to complex glycan mixtures, as well as the versatility of the Glycan Isolation Protocol, which makes possible the concurrent examination of multiple glycan classes from intact vertebrate tissues.

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