Currently, glycopeptide quantitation is mainly based on relative quantitation due to absolute quantitation requiring isotope-labeled or standard glycopeptides which may not be commercially available or are very costly and time consuming to synthesize. To address this grand challenge, coulometric mass spectrometry (CMS), based on the combination of electrochemistry (EC) and mass spectrometry (MS), was utilized to quantify electrochemically active glycopeptides without the need of using standard materials. In this study, we studied tyrosine-containing glycopeptides, NYIVGQPSS(β-GlcNAc)TGNL-OH and NYSVPSS(β-GlcNAc)TGNL-OH, and successfully quantified them directly with CMS with a discrepancy of less than 5% between the CMS measured amount and the theoretical amount.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe detection of glycans and glycoconjugates has gained increasing attention in biological fields. Traditional mass spectrometry (MS)-based methods for glycoconjugate analysis are challenged with poor intensity when dealing with complex biological samples. We developed a desalting paper spray mass spectrometry (DPS-MS) strategy to overcome the issue of signal suppression of carbohydrates in salted buffer.
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