4.2 Article

The ammonia-catalyzed release of glycoprotein N-glycans

Journal

GLYCOCONJUGATE JOURNAL
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 411-420

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10719-018-9827-6

Keywords

Glycoprotein; N-glycan; Reducing glycan; Ammonia-catalyzed release; Mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. National Natural Scince Foundation of China [31670808, 31600647, 31370804, 21375103]
  2. Natural Science Special Fund of Shaanxi Provincial Education Department [16JK1782]
  3. Scientific Research Program Fund for Shaanxi Province Key laboratory [16JS109]
  4. Scientific Research Foundation of Northwest University, China [15NW18]

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Despite the great significance of release and analysis of glycans from glycoproteins, the existing N-glycan release methods are undermined by some limitations and deficiencies. The traditional enzymatic protocols feature high N-glycan release specificity but are generally costly and inefficient for some types of N-glycans. The existing chemical methods require harsh reaction conditions or are accompanied by the remarkable formation of by-products. Herein, we describe a versatile chemical method for the release and analysis of N-glycans from glycoproteins. This method differs from the existing methods as only aqueous ammonia is used to catalyze the N-glycan release reactions. Optimization of reaction conditions was performed using RNase B as a model glycoprotein and the obtained results indicated a highest N-glycan yield in ammonia at 60 degrees C for 16h. Comparison of this method with traditional enzymatic protocols and recently reported NaClO methods confirmed the good reliability and efficiency of the novel approach. We also successfully applied this method to some complex biological samples, such as Ginkgo seed protein, fetal bovine serum (FBS) and hen egg white, and demonstrated its great compatibility with various neutral N-glycans, core -1,3-fucosylated N-glycans and sialylated N-glycans. This method is very simple and cost-effective, enabling convenient analysis and large-scale preparation of released reducing N-glycans from various biological samples for structural and functional glycomics studies.

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