4.7 Article

A Rapid Array-Based Approach to N-Glycan Profiling of Cultured Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 18, Issue 10, Pages 3630-3639

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.9b00303

Keywords

N-glycan; N-glycosylation; single cell; imaging mass spectrometry; array; stable isotope; label-free

Funding

  1. Hollings Cancer Center's Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA138313]
  2. South Carolina Clinical & Translational Research (SCTR) Institute
  3. Medical University of South Carolina CTSA, NIH/NCATS [UL1 TR001450]
  4. Medical University of South Carolina
  5. NIH/NCI [P01 CA203628, U0ICA242096]
  6. South Carolina Centers of Economic Excellence SmartState program
  7. NIH
  8. NIH/NIGMS [P20GM103542]
  9. NHLBI [HL007260]

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Typically, N-glycosylation studies done on cultured cells require up to millions of cells followed by lengthy preparation to release, isolate, and profile N-glycans. To overcome these limitations, we report a rapid array-based workflow for profiling N-glycan signatures from cells, adapted from imaging mass spectrometry used for on-tissue N-glycan profiling. Using this approach, N-glycan profiles from a low-density array of eight cell chambers could be reported within 4 h of completing cell culture. Approaches are demonstrated that account for background N-glycans due to serum media. Normalization procedures are shown. The method is robust and reproducible, requiring as few as 3000 cells per replicate with a 3-20% coefficient of variation to capture label-free profiles of N-glycans. Quantification by stable isotopic labeling of N-glycans in cell culture is demonstrated and adds no additional time to preparation. Utility of the method is demonstrated by measurement of N-glycan turnover rates due to induction of oxidative stress in human primary aortic endothelial cells. The developed method and ancillary tools serve as a foundational launching point for rapid profiling of N-glycans ranging from high-density arrays down to single cells in culture.

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