Interactions between carbohydrates (glycans) and glycan-binding proteins (GBPs) regulate a wide variety of important biological processes. However, the affinities of most monovalent glycan-GBP complexes are typically weak (dissociation constant () > μM) and difficult to reliably measure with conventional assays; consequently, the glycan specificities of most GBPs are not well established. Here, we demonstrate how electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), implemented with nanoflow ESI emitters with inner diameters of ∼50 nm, allows for the facile quantification of low-affinity glycan-GBP interactions. The small size of the droplets produced from these submicron emitters effectively eliminates the formation of nonspecific glycan-GBP binding (false positives) during the ESI process up to ∼mM glycan concentrations. Thus, interactions with affinities as low as ∼5 mM can be measured directly from the mass spectrum. The general suppression of nonspecific adducts (including nonvolatile buffers and salts) achieved with these tips enables ESI-MS glycan affinity measurements to be performed on C-type lectins, a class of GBPs that bind glycans in a calcium-dependent manner and are important regulators of immune response. At physiologically relevant calcium ion concentrations (2-3 mM), the extent of Ca nonspecific adduct formation observed using the submicron emitters is dramatically suppressed, allowing glycan affinities, and the influence of Ca thereon, to be measured. Finally, we show how the use of submicron emitters and suppression of nonspecific binding enable the quantification of labile (prone to in-source dissociation) glycan-GBP interactions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.0c05003DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

submicron emitters
16
glycan-gbp interactions
8
suppression nonspecific
8
interactions
5
submicron
4
emitters enable
4
enable reliable
4
reliable quantification
4
quantification weak
4
weak protein-glycan
4

Similar Publications

Ammonium acetate is widely used in native mass spectrometry to provide adequate ionic strength without adducting to protein ions, but different ions can preferentially stabilize or destabilize the native form of proteins in solution. The stability of bovine serum albumin (BSA) was investigated in 50 mM solutions of a variety of salts using electrospray emitters with submicron tips to desalt protein ions. The charge-state distribution of BSA is narrow (+14 to +18) in ammonium acetate (AmmAc), whereas it is much broader (+13 to +42) in solutions containing sodium acetate (NaAc), ammonium chloride (AmmCl), potassium chloride (KCl), and sodium chloride (NaCl).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Desalting strategies for native mass spectrometry.

Talanta

January 2025

School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xi'an Shiyou University, Xi'an, 710065, China. Electronic address:

In native mass spectrometry (MS) salts are indispensable for preserving the native structures of biomolecules, but detrimental to mass sensitivity, resolution, and accuracy. Such a conflict makes desalting in native MS more challenging, distinctive, and sample-dependent than in peptide-centric MS. This review first briefly introduces the charged residue mechanism whereby native-like gaseous protein ions are released from electrospray droplets, revealing a higher degree of salt adduction than denatured proteins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nano-Coprecipitation Route Synthesis of Highly-Efficient Submicron (Sr,Ba)SiO:Eu Phosphors with Enhanced Thermal Stability for MicroLED Color Conversion.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

June 2023

National and Local Joint Engineering Laboratory for Optical Conversion Materials and Technology of National Development and Reform Commission, School of Materials and Energy, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, 730000, China.

As the size of MicroLED chips shrinks below 50 μm, the emergence of quantum dots (QDs)-based color conversion with narrow-band emission and nanoscale size properties has become one of the powerful full-color solutions for MicroLED displays. However, the stability and toxicity of quantum dots limit their application in full-color MicroLEDs. The phosphor-based conversion has the prominent features of high thermal and chemical stability relative to those of QD-based conversion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of electrospray voltage on cluster size and abundance formed from aqueous CsI were investigated with emitter tip diameters between 260 ± 7 nm and 2.45 ± 0.30 μm.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

HF-Free Microwave-Assisted Synthesis of Nano-Micro-Sized K SiF :Mn for MicroLED Color Conversion.

Small Methods

September 2023

National and Local Joint Engineering Laboratory for Optical Conversion Materials and Technology of National Development and Reform Commission, School of Materials and Energy, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, 730000, China.

Micro-light-emitting diodes (MicroLED) are considered to be the next generation of ideal display devices, with chip size requirements of less than 50 µm. To meet its micron-scale pixel size, submicron luminescent materials are needed. Mn doped fluoride phosphor, K SiF :Mn (KSFM) as a red luminescent material with excellent narrow-band emission sensitivity to human eyes, has great potential as a color conversion material for full-color MicroLED.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!