Systematic Comparison
of Reverse Phase and Hydrophilic Interaction Liquid Chromatography
Platforms for the Analysis of N‑Linked Glycans
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Abstract
Due to the hydrophilic nature of glycans, reverse phase
chromatography has not been widely used as a glycomic separation technique
coupled to mass spectrometry. Other approaches such as hydrophilic
interaction chromatography and porous graphitized carbon chromatography
are often employed, though these strategies frequently suffer from
decreased chromatographic resolution, long equilibration times, indefinite
retention, and column bleed. Herein, it is shown that, through an
efficient hydrazone formation derivatization of N-linked glycans (∼4
h of additional sample preparation time which is carried out in parallel),
numerous experimental and practical advantages are gained when analyzing
the glycans by online reverse phase chromatography. These benefits
include an increased number of glycans detected, increased peak capacity
of the separation, and the ability to analyze glycans on the identical
liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry platform commonly used
for proteomic analyses. The data presented show that separation of
derivatized N-linked glycans by reverse phase chromatography significantly
out-performs traditional separation of native or derivatized glycans
by hydrophilic interaction chromatography. Furthermore, the movement
to a more ubiquitous separation technique will afford numerous research
groups the opportunity to analyze both proteomic and glycomic samples
on the same platform with minimal time and physical change between
experiments, increasing the efficiency of “multiomic”
biological approaches