Abstract

Site-specific glycosylation analysis is key to investigate structure-function relationships of glycoproteins, e.g. in the context of antigenicity and disease progression. The analysis, though, is quite challenging and time consuming, in particular for O-glycosylated proteins. In consequence, despite their clinical and biopharmaceutical importance, many human blood plasma glycoproteins have not been characterized comprehensively with respect to their O-glycosylation. Here, we report on the site-specific O-glycosylation analysis of human blood plasma glycoproteins. To this end pooled human blood plasma of healthy donors was proteolytically digested using a broad-specific enzyme (Proteinase K), followed by a precipitation step, as well as a glycopeptide enrichment and fractionation step via hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography, the latter being optimized for intact O-glycopeptides carrying short mucin-type core-1 and -2 O-glycans, which represent the vast majority of O-glycans on human blood plasma proteins. Enriched O-glycopeptide fractions were subjected to mass spectrometric analysis using reversed-phase liquid chromatography coupled online to an ion trap mass spectrometer operated in positive-ion mode. Peptide identity and glycan composition were derived from low-energy collision-induced dissociation fragment spectra acquired in multistage mode. To pinpoint the O-glycosylation sites glycopeptides were fragmented using electron transfer dissociation. Spectra were annotated by database searches as well as manually. Overall, 31 O-glycosylation sites and regions belonging to 22 proteins were identified, the majority being acute-phase proteins. Strikingly, also 11 novel O-glycosylation sites and regions were identified. In total 23 O-glycosylation sites could be pinpointed. Interestingly, the use of Proteinase K proved to be particularly beneficial in this context. The identified O-glycan compositions most probably correspond to mono- and disialylated core-1 mucin-type O-glycans (T-antigen). The developed workflow allows the identification and characterization of the major population of the human blood plasma O-glycoproteome and our results provide new insights, which can help to unravel structure-function relationships. The data were deposited to ProteomeXchange PXD003270.

Highlights

  • Outlook—In the present study we have investigated the human blood plasma mucin-type O-glycoproteome of healthy individuals in an explorative and nontargeted manner

  • Our results are in good agreement with previous findings by other research groups, and add new aspects to the field, e.g. the identification of a couple of novel O-glycosylation site as well as the benefits and drawbacks of using Proteinase K in large-scale mass spectrometric glycoproteomic studies

  • In this regard site-specific glycosylation analyses might enable understanding/controlling important glycan-related features of the final product including its efficacy, half-life, or antigenicity

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of our study was to develop a glycoproteomic workflow that allows the explorative nontargeted analysis of O-glycosylated human blood plasma proteins, which are known to carry mainly short mono- and disialylated mucintype core-1 and -2 O-glycans

Results
Discussion
Conclusion

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