2017
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201702896
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Glycan Fingerprinting via Cold‐Ion Infrared Spectroscopy

Abstract: The diversity of stereochemical isomers present in glycans and glycoconjugates poses af ormidable challenge for comprehensive structural analysis.T ypically,s ophisticated mass spectrometry (MS)-based techniques are used in combination with chromatography or ion-mobility separation. However,c oexisting structurally similar isomers often render an unambiguous identification impossible.O ther powerful techniques such as gas-phase infrared (IR) spectroscopyh ave been limited to smaller glycans,since conformationa… Show more

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Cited by 126 publications
(140 citation statements)
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“…Compagnion and co-workers [26, 27] have recently implemented a similar approach. In a very recent paper, Mucha et al [28] used helium droplets to obtain spectroscopic fingerprints of oligosaccharides, showing that sufficiently resolved spectra could indeed distinguish the various types of isomerism, albeit with an admittedly complex experimental set-up. In the present work, we use messenger-tagging infrared spectroscopy in a cryogenic ion trap in combination with IMS-MS to identify and characterize glycans.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compagnion and co-workers [26, 27] have recently implemented a similar approach. In a very recent paper, Mucha et al [28] used helium droplets to obtain spectroscopic fingerprints of oligosaccharides, showing that sufficiently resolved spectra could indeed distinguish the various types of isomerism, albeit with an admittedly complex experimental set-up. In the present work, we use messenger-tagging infrared spectroscopy in a cryogenic ion trap in combination with IMS-MS to identify and characterize glycans.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even with the growing suite of MS n methods, the deconvolution and identification of co-eluting species remains a challenge since isomers exhibit very similar fragmentation pathways 4 , 5 . Additionally, while spectroscopic approaches have shown promise for glycan fingerprinting, these methods remain of limited utility for accurately characterizing isomeric mixtures 6 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS)-based approaches are quickly becoming an attractive, and rapid, alternative to 1-D chromatographic separations 2 , and even have shown utility as a front-end separation prior to spectroscopic methods 6 . In IM-MS ions are separated in the gas-phase based on their mobilities (size/shape) as well as mass-to-charge ( m/z ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…[2] Based on this,cancer cells can be identified, for instance,b yd etecting their specific membrane glycoproteins, [3] which may differ from those of the healthy cells by the isoform of the glycan only,w hile viruses and bacteria adhere to appropriate cells for invasion by selective binding to specific membrane glycans, [4] distinguishing them from many other structurally similar (for example, isomeric) saccharides.T hese and many other examples illustrate the importance of comprehensive structural studies of carbohydrates,i ncluding the identification of their isoforms. Vibrational spectroscopy in the gas phase (for example,infrared multiple photon dissociation [10] or IR-induced fragmentation of tagged saccharides [11] )w as able to distinguish, though without quantification, many stereoisomers of small oligosaccharides. ), although not all of them are essential in nature.I nc ontrast to amino acids and nucleotides,t hese isomeric units can interconnect through different OH groups, forming regioisomers,but also at multiple points,assembling into linear and branched structural isomers.N atural modifications (for example, N-acetylation) of different units further multiply the number of possible isoforms.Human milk alone, for instance,c ontains at least 200 different oligosaccharides, many of which are essential not only for supplying energy to newborns,but also for their antibacterial defense.…”
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confidence: 99%