Partially acetylated chito-oligosaccharides (paCOS) have diverse bioactivities that turn them into promising compounds especially for medical and agricultural applications. These properties likely arise from different acetylation patterns, but determining the sequences of paCOS and producing paCOS with patterns of interest have proven difficult. We present a novel method for sequencing submicrogram amounts of paCOS using quantitative mass spectrometry, allowing one to rapidly analyze the substrate specificities of chitosan hydrolases that can be used to produce paCOS. The method involves four major steps: (i) acetylation of free amino groups in paCOS using a deuterated reagent; (ii) labeling the reducing end with an O-tag; (iii) quantifying paCOS using [C, H]-labeled isotopologs as internal standards; (iv) sequencing paCOS by tandem MS. Eventually, this method will aid in developing enzymes with cleavage patterns optimized for producing paCOS with defined patterns of acetylation and specific bioactivities.
Shiga toxin (Stx) 2e of Stx-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) represents the major virulence factor responsible for the pig edema disease which is characterized by hemorrhagic lesions, neurological disorders and often fatal outcomes. Stx2e-producing strains from the intestine of slaughtered pigs (n = 3), feces of piglets with postweaning diarrhea or edema disease (n = 12) and feces of humans with asymptomatic infections or mild diarrhea (n = 13) were comparatively analyzed for the binding specificities of Stx2e to glycosphingolipids (GSLs) of the globo-series. Besides equivalent binding towards globotriaosylceramide (Gb3Cer) and globotetraosylceramide (Gb4Cer), we could demonstrate specific interaction of Stx2e preparations from human and porcine STEC isolates with Forssman GSL. Notably, Forssman GSL was recognized neither by structurally closely related Stx2 nor by Stx1 derived from human STEC isolates conferring Stx2e a unique recognition feature. Noteworthy, 7 (54%) of the 13 human and 8 (53%) of the 15 pig Stx2e samples exhibited cytotoxic action towards human brain microvascular endothelial cells. Our findings provide a basis for further exploring the functional role of the promiscuous receptor repertoire of Stx2e and the exact nature of the mechanisms that underlie different pathological outcomes of Stx2e-producing STEC in humans and pigs.
Background: Extracellular matrix dystroglycan has essential functions at the neuromuscular junction and at inhibitory synapses in the brain.Results: Brain dystroglycan competes with neurexophilin-1 and neuroligins for binding to presynaptic α-neurexins.Conclusion: Competition between α-neurexin ligands in combination with alternative splicing determines formation of important trans-synaptic complexes.Significance: This is the first analysis of binding interference in α-neurexin multiplexes.
Characterisation and identification of disulfide bridges is an important aspect of structural elucidation of proteins. Covalent cysteine-cysteine contacts within the protein give rise to stabilisation of the native tertiary structure of the molecules. Bottom-up identification and sequencing of proteins by mass spectrometry most frequently involves reductive cleavage and alkylation of disulfide links followed by enzymatic digestion. However, when using this approach, information on cysteine-cysteine contacts within the protein is lost. Mass spectrometric characterisation of peptides containing intra-chain disulfides is a challenging analytical task, because peptide bonds within the disulfide loop are believed to be resistant to fragmentation. In this contribution we show recent results on the fragmentation of intra and inter-peptide disulfide bonds of proteolytic peptides by nano electrospray ionisation collision-induced dissociation (nanoESI CID). Disulfide bridge-containing peptides obtained from proteolytic digests were submitted to low-energy nanoESI CID using a quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-TOF) instrument as a mass analyser. Fragmentation of the gaseous peptide ions gave rise to a set of b and y-type fragment ions which enabled derivation of the sequence of the amino acids located outside the disulfide loop. Surprisingly, careful examination of the fragment-ion spectra of peptide ions comprising an intramolecular disulfide bridge revealed the presence of low-abundance fragment ions formed by the cleavage of peptide bonds within the disulfide loop. These fragmentations are preceded by proton-induced asymmetric cleavage of the disulfide bridge giving rise to a modified cysteine containing a disulfohydryl substituent and a dehydroalanine residue on the C-S cleavage site.
Glycosylation of proteins represents one of the most important post-translational modifications. The structural characterisation of glycoproteins--especially with respect to the determination of the glycosylation site--by direct mass spectrometric methods still remains an elusive goal. We have applied the low energy dissociation method electron capture dissociation (ECD) in a 9.4 T Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer to the structural elucidation of mucin-derived peptides glycosylated with glycans of different core types. Capture of an electron by multiply protonated precursor ions [M + nH](n+) resulted in the formation of reduced odd electron radical cations [M + nH](n-1)+*. Subsequent cleavage of the N-Calpha bonds of the peptide chain, mostly without loss of the labile sugar moiety, represents a major fragmentation pathway allowing unambiguous assignment of the glycosylation site. In addition to peptide backbone cleavages, loss of acetyl radicals from the N-acetyl group of the HexNAc glycans is observed. Radical site induced elimination processes of the glycan moieties initiated by hydrogen transfer, from the glycan to the peptide backbone and vice versa give rise to signals in the ECD spectra. The different sugar core types exhibit different fragmentation patterns driven by the stability of the resulting fragments allowing the discrimination of isomeric glycans.
a b s t r a c tThe contributions of the -3 subsite and a putative +3 subsite to substrate positioning in ChiA from Serratia marcescens have been investigated by comparing how ChiA and its -3 subsite mutant W167A interact with soluble substrates. The data show that Trp -GlcNAc stacking in the -3 subsite rigidifies the protein backbone supporting the formation of the intermolecular interaction network that is necessary for the recognition and positioning of the N-acetyl groups before the -1 subsite. The +3 subsite exhibits considerable substrate affinity that may promote endo-activity in ChiA and/or assist in expelling dimeric products from the +1 and +2 subsites during processive hydrolysis.
Protein glycosylation was explored by direct nanoESI MS and MS/MS analysis of ZIC-HILIC-enriched proteolytic glycopeptides without further separation or purification. In a previous publication, we demonstrated that a direct MS-based analysis of proteolytic glycopeptides is feasible for a number of proteins (Henning , S. J. Mass Spectrom. 2007 , 42 , 1415 - 21). This method has now been refined for two aspects: (1) separation of glycopeptides by use of ZIC-HILIC SPE and (2) the use of unspecific proteases like thermolysin, elastase, or a trypsin/chymotrypsin mixture leading per se to a mass-based separation, that is, small nonglycosylated peptides and almost exclusively glycopeptides at higher m/z values. Furthermore, the glycopeptides produced by the above proteases in general contain short peptide backbones thus improving-probably due to their higher hydrophilicity--the ZIC-HILIC-based separation. The combination of unspecific proteolysis, glycopeptide separation, and their direct MS analysis was successfully accomplished for probing glycoproteins carrying high-mannose type (ribonuclease B), neutral (asialofetuin), and acidic (haptoglobin and α1-acid glycoprotein) complex type glycans as well as for glycopeptides derived from glycoprotein mixtures and, finally, for exploring the glycosylation of a human IgG preparation. Our results show that the presented method is a fast, facile, and inexpensive procedure for the elucidation of protein N-glycosylation.
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