Identification of protein O-glycosylation site and corresponding glycans using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry via mapping accurate mass and retention time shift

•O-glycosylation sites were identified from cleaved digests made by a feasible kit.•Intact glycopeptides of each site were mapped based on in-house glycan database.•Retention time filtering reduced 90% of FDR associated with the O-glycan mapping.•Site-specific O-glycosylations of Enbrol® and Factor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Chromatography A 2014-12, Vol.1371, p.136-145
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Li-Juan, Lin, Jen-Hui, Tsai, Jung-Heng, Chu, Yen-Yin, Chen, Yen-Wen, Chen, Shun-Li, Chen, Shu-Hui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•O-glycosylation sites were identified from cleaved digests made by a feasible kit.•Intact glycopeptides of each site were mapped based on in-house glycan database.•Retention time filtering reduced 90% of FDR associated with the O-glycan mapping.•Site-specific O-glycosylations of Enbrol® and Factor IX therapeutics were reported. We reported an improved combinatorial approach for identifying site-specific O-glycosylation using both glycan cleaved and non-cleaved methods. In this approach, a non-reducing β-elimination kit coupled with non-specific enzymes performed efficient digestion, O-glycan cleavage, and partial dephosphorylation without significant side reactions, thus enabling an automatic database search for the cleaved O-glycosylation or serine/threonine (S/T) phosphorylation sites. From the same sample concurrently prepared without β-elimination, the corresponding intact O-glycopeptides were mapped by accurate precursor ion mass using an in-house glycan database majorly composed of GalNAc (mucin-type) core and the retention-time shift (ΔRt). Each glycopeptide assignment was verified by the detection of glycan-specific fragments using collision-induced dissociation (CID) to estimate False Discovery Rate (FDR). Using fetuin as a model, all identified S/T elimination sites were matched to multiple intact glycopeptides with a 31% FDR. This considerably reduced to 0% FDR by ΔRt filtering. This approach was then applied to a protein mixture composed of therapeutic Factor IX and Enbrel® mixed with fetuin and kappa-casein. A total of 26 glycosylation sites each of which corresponds to 1–4 glycans were positively mapped and confirmed. The FDR decreased from 33% to 3.3% by ΔRt filtering and exclusion of repeated peptide tags that covered the same glycosylation sites. Moreover, the phosphorylation and O-glycosylation on the same site such as T159 of Factor IX and T170 of kappa-casein were able to be unambiguously differentiated. Thus, our approach is useful for in-depth characterization of site-specific O-glycosylation of a simple mixture such as protein-based therapeutics.
ISSN:0021-9673
1873-3778
DOI:10.1016/j.chroma.2014.10.046