1 research outputs found
Glycomic Profiling of Tissue Sections by LC-MS
Because routine preparation of glycan
samples involves multiple
reaction and cleaning steps at which sample loss occurs, glycan analysis
is typically performed using large tissue samples. This type of analysis
yields no detailed molecular spatial information and requires special
care to maintain proper storage and shipping conditions. We describe
here a new glycan sample preparation protocol using minimized sample
preparation steps and optimized procedures. Tissue sections and spotted
samples first undergo on-surface enzymatic digestion to release N-glycans.
The released glycans are then reduced and permethylated prior to online
purification and LC-electrospray ionization (ESI)-MS analysis. The
efficiency of this protocol was initially evaluated using model glycoproteins
and human blood serum (HBS) spotted on glass or Teflon slides. The
new protocol permitted the detection of permethylated N-glycans derived
from 10 ng RNase B. On the other hand, 66 N-glycans were identified
when injecting the equivalent of permethylated glycans derived from
a 0.1-μL aliquot of HBS. On-tissue enzymatic digestion of nude
mouse brain tissue permitted the detection of 43 N-glycans. The relative
peak areas of these 43 glycans were comparable to those from a C57BL/6
mouse reported by the Consortium for Functional Glycomics (CFG). However,
the sample size analyzed in the protocol described here was substantially
smaller than for the routine method (submicrogram vs mg). The on-tissue
N-glycan profiling method permits high sensitivity and reproducibility
and can be widely applied to assess the spatial distribution of glycans
associated with tissue sections, and may be correlated with immunoflourescence
imaging when adjacent tissue sections are analyzed