Abstract

The identification of N-glycans in plant glycoproteins or plant-made pharmaceuticals is essential for understanding their structure, function, properties, immunogenicity, and allergenicity (induced by plant-specific core-fucosylation or xylosylation) in the applications of plant food, agriculture, and plant biotechnology. N-glycosidase A is widely used to release the Nglycans of plant glycoproteins because the core-fucosylated N-glycans of plant glycoproteins are hydrolyzed by N-glycosidase A but not by N-glycosidase F. However, the efficiency of Nglycosidase A activity in plant glycoproteins remains unclear. The aim of the study was to elucidate the efficient use of N-glycosidases to identify and quantify the N-glycans of plant glycoproteins; it aimed at identification of released N-glycans by Nglycosidase F and assessment of their relative quantities with a focus on unidentified N-glycans by N-glycosidase A in plant glycoproteins, Phaseolus vulgaris lectin (PHA) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry was used to analyze and compare the N-glycans of PHA and HRP treated with either N-glycosidase A or F under denaturing conditions. The relative quantities (%) of each N-glycan (>0.1%) to the total N-glycans (100%) were determined. N-glycosidase A and F released 9 identical N-glycans of PHA, but two additional corefucosylated N-glycans were released by only N-glycosidase A, as expected. By contrast, in HRP, 8 N-glycans comprising 6 core-fucosylated N-glycans, 1 xylosylated N-glycan, and 1 mannosylated N-glycan were released by N-glycosidase A. Moreover, 8 unexpected N-glycans comprising 1 corefucosylated N-glycan, 4 xylosylated N-glycans, and 3 mannosylated N-glycans were released by Nglycosidase F. Of these, 3 xylosylated and 2 mannosylated N-glycans were released by only Nglycansodase F. These results demonstrate that N-glycosidase A alone is insufficient to release the Nglycans of all plant glycoproteins, suggesting that to identify and quantify the released N-glycans of the plant glycoprotein HRP, both N-glycosidase A and F treatments are required.

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