Bloodï¼ which forms part of the systemic circulatory systemï¼ contains proteins from various tissues and organs. Henceï¼ blood samples are ideal vehicles for studying diseases and physiological states. Plasma is an important component of blood and is essential for clinical proteomics research. Plasma contains rich physiological and pathological informationï¼ consequentlyï¼ it is an ideal medium for discovering disease-related biomarkers. Protein N-glycosylation is a key post-translational modification route. This route is widely involved in biological processes such as intercellular communicationï¼ immune regulationï¼ and signal transduction. Changes resulting from aberrant N-glycosylation are closely associated with various pathological conditionsï¼ including autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases and tumors. Henceï¼ N-glycosylation proteomics is highly valuable during biomarker and drug-target development. Howeverï¼ efficiently enriching N-glycopeptides in biological samples before detection by mass spectrometry ï¼MSï¼ is difficult. This is because the highly abundant unmodified peptides result in signal suppression. Consequentlyï¼ achieving deep N-glycoproteomic coverage is a key challengeï¼ particularly for trace plasma samplesï¼ for which in-depth studies are currently lacking. In this studyï¼ we developed a strategy for comprehensively profiling trace N-glycopeptides in plasma. This includes an efficient enrichment method in combination with highly sensitive MS. The developed approach integrates glycopeptide enrichment using advanced hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography ï¼HILICï¼ with state-of-the-art MS platforms. This significantly enhances detection depth and sensitivity during N-glycosylation analysis using minimal plasma volumes. Selectivity and efficiency during N-glycopeptide enrichment were maximized by systematically optimizing key HILIC-packed stationary-phase parameters. These parameters include chemical compositionï¼ pore sizeï¼ and surface modification. Additionallyï¼ the elution gradient was fine-tuned to improve glycopeptide recovery. This optimization process delivered high N-glycopeptide specificityï¼ even in complex plasma matrices. To overcome the limitations of single-platform MSï¼ we implemented a complementary dual-platform strategy. This strategy combines the high-speedï¼ high-resolution capabilities of the Tims TOF Pro 2 instrument with the ultra-high mass accuracy and resolution of the Orbitrap Lumos spectrometer. The former instrument facilitates the rapid and sensitive identification of glycopeptidesï¼ particularly for low-abundance species. It exploits the trapped ion mobility spectrometry ï¼TIMSï¼ and parallel accumulated sequential fragmentation ï¼PASEFï¼ technology. The Orbitrap Lumos provides exceptional mass accuracy and high-resolution MS/MS spectra that enable confident glycopeptide structural characterization. This synergistic approach significantly expands the N-glycopeptide identification depth and ensures comprehensive glycosylation-site and glycan-composition coverage. The developed optimized workflow successfully identified 2 962 intact N-glycopeptides using only 20 μg of plasma peptides ï¼equivalent to 0.5 μL of whole plasmaï¼. This set a new benchmark for sensitivity in the micro-volume plasma glycoproteome field. This achievement addresses a critical gapï¼ where conventional methods typically require much larger sample volumes. This limits their applicability to clinical and precision medicine settings where sample availability is restricted. The developed platform provides a robust and reliable analytical framework for plasma N-glycoproteomics with significant implications for precision medicine. This method facilitates large-scale clinical studies by enabling highly sensitive glycopeptide profiling from very small plasma volumes. This included the longitudinal monitoring of disease progression and therapeutic responses. Furthermoreï¼ it offers a powerful tool for discovering novel N-glycosylation-based biomarkers for use in early disease diagnosisï¼ prognosisï¼ and personalized treatment strategies. In summaryï¼ this study advances the technical capabilities of plasma N-glycoproteomics. Additionallyï¼ it facilitates the broader use of plasma N-glycoproteomics in biomedical research and clinical diagnostics.
[A large-scale method for the enrichment and identification of N-glycopeptides in microscale plasma samples].
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作者:Yang Xin-Yi, Qin Wei-Jie
| 期刊: | Chinese Journal of Chromatography | 影响因子: | 1.000 |
| 时间: | 2025 | 起止号: | 2025 Sep;43(9):996-1004 |
| doi: | 10.3724/SP.J.1123.2025.04004 | ||
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