A metabolic labeling approach toward proteomic analysis of mucin-type O-linked glycosylation

HC Hang, C Yu, DL Kato… - Proceedings of the …, 2003 - National Acad Sciences
HC Hang, C Yu, DL Kato, CR Bertozzi
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003National Acad Sciences
Mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins are involved in a variety of biological interactions in
higher eukaryotes. The biosynthesis of these glycoproteins is initiated by a family of
polypeptide N-acetyl-α-galactosaminyltransferases (ppGalNAcTs) that modify proteins in the
secretory pathway. The lack of a defined consensus sequence for the ppGalNAcTs makes
the prediction of mucin-type O-linked glycosylation difficult based on primary sequence
alone. Herein we present a method for labeling mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins with a …
Mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins are involved in a variety of biological interactions in higher eukaryotes. The biosynthesis of these glycoproteins is initiated by a family of polypeptide N-acetyl-α-galactosaminyltransferases (ppGalNAcTs) that modify proteins in the secretory pathway. The lack of a defined consensus sequence for the ppGalNAcTs makes the prediction of mucin-type O-linked glycosylation difficult based on primary sequence alone. Herein we present a method for labeling mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins with a unique chemical tag, the azide, which permits their selective covalent modification from complex cell lysates. From a panel of synthetic derivatives, we identified an azido GalNAc analog (N-azidoacetylgalactosamine, GalNAz) that is metabolized by numerous cell types and installed on mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins by the ppGalNAcTs. The azide serves as a bioorthogonal chemical handle for selective modification with biochemical or biophysical probes using the Staudinger ligation. The approach was validated by labeling a recombinant glycoprotein that is known to possess O-linked glycans with GalNAz. In addition, GalNAz efficiently labeled mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins expressed at endogenous levels. The ability to label mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins with chemical tags should facilitate their identification by proteomic strategies.
National Acad Sciences