Analysis of protein glycosylation within the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has revealed an abundant and unreported set of core chitobiose modifications (CCMs) to N-linked glycans. With hydrazine release, an array of glycomers and isobars were detected with hexose extensions on the 3- and 3,6-positions of the penultimate and reducing terminus, respectively. A full complement of structures includes a range of glycomers possessing a Galbeta(1-4)Fuc disaccharide at the 3- and 6-positions of the protein-linked GlcNAc. Importantly, enzymatic (PNGase F/A) release failed to liberate many of these extended structures from reduced and alkylated peptides and, as a consequence, such profiles were markedly deficient in a representation of the worm glycome. Moreover, the 3-linked Galbeta(1-4)Fuc moiety was notably resistant to a range of commercial galactosidases. For identification, the fragments were spectrum-matched with synthetic products and library standards using sequential mass spectrometry (MS(n)). A disaccharide observed at the 3-position of penultimate GlcNAc, indicating a Hex-Fuc branch on some structures, was not further characterized because of low ion abundance in MS(n). Additionally, a Hex-Hex-Fuc trisaccharide on the 6-position of proximal GlcNAc was also distinguished on select glycomers. Similar branch extensions on 6-linked core fucosyl residues have recently been reported among other invertebrates. Natural methylation and numerous isobars complement the glycome, which totals well over 100 individual structures. Complex glycans were detected at lower abundance, indicating glucosaminyltransferase-I (GnT-I) and GnT-II activity. A range of phosphorylcholine (PC)-substituted complex glycans were also confirmed following a signature two-stage loss of PC during MS(n) analysis, although the precursor ion was not observed in the mass profiles. In a similar manner, numerous other minor glycans may be present but unobserved in hydrazine-release profiles dominated by fucosylated structures. All CCM structures, including multiple isomers, were determined without chromatography by gas-phase disassembly (MS(n)) in Paul and linear ion trap (IT) instruments.
Documenting mass spectral data is a fundamental aspect of accepted protocols. In this report we contrast MSn sequential disassembly spectra obtained from natural and synthetic glycan epitopes. The epitopes considered are clusters found on conjugate termini of lipids and N-, and O-glycans of proteins. The latter are most frequently pendant through a CID-labile HexNAc glycosidic linkage. The synthetic samples were supplied by collaborating colleagues and commercial sources and usually possessed a readily released reducing-end linker, a by-product of synthesis. All samples were comparably methylated, extracted, and MSn disassembled to compare their linkage and branching spectral details. Both sample types provide B-ion type fragments early in a disassembly pathway and their compositions are a suggestion of structure. Further steps of disassembly are necessary to confirm the details of linkage and branching. Included in this study were various Lewis and H antigens, 3- and 6-linked sialyl-lactosamine, NeuAc-2,8-NeuAc dimer, and Galα1,3Gal. Sample infusion provided high quality spectral data while disassembly to small fragments generates reproducible high signal/noise spectra for spectral matching. All samples were analyzed as sodium adducted positive ions. This study includes comparability statistics and evaluations on several mass spectrometers.
We have previously reported, from the nematode worm Caenor-habditis elegans, three genes (gly-12, gly-13 and gly-14) encoding enzymically active UDP-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine:alpha-3-D-mannoside beta1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I (GnT I), an enzyme essential for hybrid, paucimannose and complex N-glycan synthesis. We now describe a worm with null mutations in all three GnT I genes, gly-14 (III);gly-12 gly-13 (X) (III and X refer to the chromosome number). The triple-knock-out (TKO) worms have a normal phenotype, although they do not express GnT I activity and do not synthesize 31 paucimannose, complex and fucosylated oligomannose N-glycans present in the wild-type worm. The TKO worm has increased amounts of non-fucosylated oligomannose N-glycan structures, a finding consistent with the site of GnT I action. Five fucosylated oligomannose N-glycan structures were observed in TKO, but not wild-type, worms, indicating the presence of unusual GnT I-independent fucosyltransferases. It is concluded that wild-type C. elegans makes a large number of GnT I-dependent N-glycans that are not essential for normal worm development under laboratory conditions. The TKO worm may be more susceptible to mutations in other genes, thereby providing an approach for the identification of genes that interact with GnT I.
Glycosyltransferases, usually residing within the intracellular secretory apparatus, also circulate in the blood. Many of these blood-borne glycosyltransferases are associated with pathological states, including malignancies and inflammatory conditions. Despite the potential for dynamic modifications of glycans on distal cell surfaces and in the extracellular milieu, the glycan-modifying activities present in systemic circulation have not been systematically examined. Here, we describe an evaluation of blood-borne sialyl-, galactosyl-and fucosyltransferase activities that act upon the four common terminal glycan precursor motifs, GlcNAc monomer, Gal(β3)GlcNAc, Gal(β4)GlcNAc and Gal(β3)GalNAc, to produce more complex glycan structures. Data from radioisotope assays and detailed product analysis by sequential tandem mass spectrometry show that blood has the capacity to generate many of the well-recognized and important glycan motifs, including the Lewis, sialylLewis, H-and Sialyl-T antigens. While many of these glycosyltransferases are freely circulating in the plasma, human and mouse platelets are important carriers for others, including ST3Gal-1 and β4GalT. Platelets compartmentalize glycosyltransferases and release them upon activation. Human platelets are also carriers for large amounts of ST6Gal-1 and the α3-sialyl to Gal(β4)GlcNAc sialyltransferases, both of which are conspicuously absent in mouse platelets. This study highlights the capability of circulatory glycosyltransferases, which are dynamically controlled by platelet activation, to remodel cell surface glycans and alter cell behavior.
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