Glycomic Analysis by Glycoprotein Immobilization for
Glycan Extraction and Liquid Chromatography on Microfluidic Chip
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Abstract
Glycosylation is one of the most
common protein modifications and
profoundly regulates many biological processes. Aberrant glycosylation
is reported to associate with diseases such as cancers, human immunodeficiency
virus, and immune disorders. It is considerably important to study
protein glycosylation and the associated glycans for diagnostics and
disease prognostics. Unlike other protein modifications, glycans attached
to proteins are enormously complex. Therefore, the comprehensive analysis
of glycans from biological or clinical samples is an unmet technical
challenge. Development of the high-throughput method will facilitate
the glycomics analysis. In this study, we developed a novel method
for the high-throughput analysis of N-glycans from glycoproteins using
glycoprotein immobilization for glycan extraction (GIG) coupled with
liquid chromatography (LC) in an integrated microfluidic platform
(chipLC). The separated glycans were then analyzed by mass spectrometry.
Briefly, proteins were first immobilized on a solid support. Glycans
on immobilized glycoproteins were modified on solid phase to increase
the detection and structure analysis. N-Glycans were then enzymatically
released and subsequentially separated by porous graphitized carbon
particles packed in the same device. By applying the GIG-chipLC for
glycomic analysis of human sera, we identified N-glycans with 148
distinct N-glycan masses. The platform was used to analyze N-glycans
from mouse heart tissue and serum. The extracted N-glycans from tissues
indicated that unique unsialylated N-glycans were detected in tissues
that were missing from the proximal or distal serum, whereas common
N-glycans from tissues and serum have mature and sialylated structures.
The GIG-chipLC provides a simple and robust platform for glycomic
analysis of complex biological and clinical samples