Glycosylation defines the adhesive properties of animal cell surfaces and the surrounding extracellular environments. those of proteins, lipids, and small molecule metabolites. Special attention is given to the uses of mass spectral profiling for glycomics with respect to the derivatization prior to CE/MS. The following is a summary of recent CE/MS applications to glycoprotein analysis. Polyvinyl alcohol-coated capillaries have been used to analyze glycopeptides from recombinant protein proteolytic digests (Gennaro et al., 2006). Released glycans were then analyzed by CE/MS of the APTS derivatives (Gennaro and Salas-Solano, Rabbit Polyclonal to TRIM24 2008). The glycopeptide CE/MS data prove very useful for mapping has been analyzed in native form using MALDI-TOF 96036-03-2 MS to show a polymeric mixture ranging from 5,000C14,000?Da (Chan and Tang, 2003). The was permethylated and analyzed using MALDI-TOF mass 96036-03-2 spectrometry and showed a polymer consisting of a series of tetrasaccharide units attached to a core oligosaccharide of composition (HexNAc3Hex)Kdo (Prior et al., 2003). Glycosaminoglycan polymers of up to degree of polymerization 40 have been observed using an LC/MS system employing reversed phase ion pairing chromatography (Kuberan et al., 2002). This system has the advantage that the complexity of the polysaccharides entering the MS source at a give time is limited by the chromatography system. A low molecular weight heparin preparation with average molecular weight of 5,500 Da was analyzed using on-line SEC-MS (Henriksen et al., 2004). Again, the chromatography stage increases the extent to which the complex ion patterns may be interpreted. Hyaluronan oligosaccharides have been analyzed using MALDI-TOF MS (Sakai et al., 2007). This work that showed increases in sensitivity for oligomers ranging from dp 4C34 when uronic acid residues are derivatized to methyl esters. Nano-ESI FTMS has been used to analyze NRS 2004/3a (Bindila et al., 2007; Steiner et al., 2006). This approach identified a 12 amino acid peptide backbone with up to 51 monosaccharide residues. Mass Spectral Glycomics Profiling Approaches 96036-03-2 without stable isotope labels 96036-03-2 model organism (Cipollo et al., 2002). The studies elucidated a five major mutants (Cipollo et al., 2004b). A solid-phase permethylation procedure (Kang et al., 2005) has been used to analyze egg jelly coats (Tseng et al., 1997) led to the definition of a catalog library approach for characterization of sub-structural motifs (Tseng et al., 1999). Using this approach, product ion signature patterns determine the presence of known substructures in related oligosaccharide molecules (Tseng et al., 2001). The catalog library approach has also been used with exoglycosidase digestion to identify the linkages of individual residues (Zhang et al., 2004a). An LC/MS approach has also been used to profile the 96036-03-2 morphological distribution of (Zhang et al., 2004b). Mucin oligosaccharides have high value as potential disease biomarkers. Mucin infection (Cooke et al., 2007). The the core (Suzuki et al., 2005; Vakhrushev et al., 2004). Likewise, in the negative mode, C-, A-, and D-ions may be used to differentiate fucosylation isomers (Harvey et al., 2008; Sagi et al., 2002). For permethylated glycans, fucosylation isomers may be differentiated based on a combination of B-, Y-, and A-type ions (Viseux et al., 1997). Determination of other disaccharide linkages In the process of disassembly of glycans in the gas phase, the amount of information produced on individual structural elements increases. The formation of B-type ions from dissociation of permethylated glycans in a trapped ion instrument has the advantage that subsequent crossring cleavages are favored through retro-Diels Alder rearrangement. Such fragmentation has been shown to differentiate Gal(1C4)Gal(1C4)Glc-ol from Glc(1C4)Glc(1C4)Glc-ol using MS3 of the B2 ion. This general approach has been applied to analysis of nematode. Another approach entails oxidation of glycoprotein using periodate. This reaction converts cis-diols on carbohydrates to aldehydes. The glycoproteins containing oxidized carbohydrates are then coupled to a solid support using hydrazide chemistry (Tian et al., 2007; Zhang et al., 2003). Nonglycosylated proteins are washed away. The bound proteins are then digested with trypsin and analyzed.