Publication | Closed Access
A Strategy for Identification of Oligosaccharide Structures Using Observational Multistage Mass Spectral Library
150
Citations
19
References
2005
Year
Observational Mass SpectraBiochemistryMedicineNatural SciencesBioanalysisGlycobiologyMass SpectrometryMolecular BiologyStructure DeterminationStructural BiologyImmunoglobulin GPolysaccharideProtein EngineeringSpectral SearchingProteomicsCarbohydrate-protein InteractionBiophysicsGlycosylation
Glycosylation is the most widespread posttranslational modification in eukaryotes; however, the role of oligosaccharides attached to proteins has been little studied because of the lack of a sensitive and easy analytical method for oligosaccharide structures. Recently, tandem mass spectrometric techniques have been revealing that oligosaccharides might have characteristic signal intensity profiles. We describe here a strategy for the rapid and accurate identification of the oligosaccharide structures on glycoproteins using only mass spectrometry. It is based on a comparison of the signal intensity profiles of multistage tandem mass (MSn) spectra between the analyte and a library of observational mass spectra acquired from structurally defined oligosaccharides prepared using glycosyltransferases. To smartly identify the oligosaccharides released from biological materials, a computer suggests which ion among the fragment ions in the MS/MS spectrum should yield the most informative MS3 spectrum to distinguish similar oligosaccharides. Using this strategy, we were able to identify the structure of N-linked oligosaccharides in immunoglobulin G as an example.
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