Glycosylation is extremely complex, with the potential for a protein to have oligosaccharides attached at multiple sites, and for each site of glycosylation to have multiple structures attached to it. Structural information on the oligosaccharides bound to either asparagine residues (N-linked) or serine and threonine residues (O-linked) requires sensitive, specialised, and complex techniques and equipment. We show here, however, that a large amount of information regarding the glycosylation of glycoproteins can be obtained with common protein techniques such as 1D SDS-PAGE and peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF). Enzymatic deglycosylation in combination with SDS-PAGE and PMF analysis can determine the relative percentage of N-linked carbohydrate on the glycosylated protein, as well as attachment sites of the oligosaccharides.
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