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Clustered O-Glycans of IgA1: DEFINING MACRO- AND MICROHETEROGENEITY BY USE OF ELECTRON CAPTURE/TRANSFER DISSOCIATION*
Authors:Kazuo Takahashi  Stephanie B Wall  Hitoshi Suzuki  Archer D Smith  IV  Stacy Hall  Knud Poulsen  Mogens Kilian  James A Mobley  Bruce A Julian  Jiri Mestecky  Jan Novak  Matthew B Renfrow
Institution:4. Biomedical FT-ICR MS Laboratory, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics and University of Alabama, at Birmingham, Alabama 35294;3. Departments of Microbiology, University of Alabama, at Birmingham, Alabama 35294;12. Departments of Medicine, and University of Alabama, at Birmingham, Alabama 35294;6. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Aarhus University, Aarhus, DK-8000 Denmark, and;8. Department of Immunology and Microbiology, School of Medicine, Charles University, Prague 12800, Czech Republic,;1. |Current address: Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, Juntendo University Faculty of Medicine, Tokyo 113-8421, Japan
Abstract:IgA nephropathy (IgAN) is the most common primary glomerulonephritis in the world. Aberrantly glycosylated IgA1, with galactose (Gal)-deficient hinge region (HR) O-glycans, plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of the disease. It is not known whether the glycosylation defect occurs randomly or preferentially at specific sites. We have described the utility of activated ion-electron capture dissociation (AI-ECD) mass spectrometric analysis of IgA1 O-glycosylation. However, locating and characterizing the entire range of O-glycan attachment sites are analytically challenging due to the clustered serine and threonine residues in the HR of IgA1 heavy chain. To address this problem, we analyzed all glycoforms of the HR glycopeptides of a Gal-deficient IgA1 myeloma protein, mimicking the aberrant IgA1 in patients with IgAN, by use of a combination of IgA-specific proteases + trypsin and AI-ECD Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). The IgA-specific proteases provided a variety of IgA1 HR fragments that allowed unambiguous localization of all O-glycosylation sites in the six most abundant glycoforms, including the sites deficient in Gal. Additionally, this protocol was adapted for on-line liquid chromatography (LC)-AI-ECD MS/MS and LC-electron transfer dissociation MS/MS analysis. Our results thus represent a new clinically relevant approach that requires ECD/electron transfer dissociation-type fragmentation to define the molecular events leading to pathogenesis of a chronic kidney disease. Furthermore, this work offers generally applicable principles for the analysis of clustered sites of O-glycosylation.Glycosylation is one of the most common post-translational modifications of proteins. It is estimated that over half of mammalian proteins are glycosylated. Patients with several autoimmune disorders, chronic inflammatory diseases, and some infectious diseases exhibit abnormal glycosylation of serum immunoglobulins and other glycoproteins (15). The biological functions of these modifications in health and disease have become a significant area of interest in biomedical research (6). A subset of these glycoproteins has clustered sites of O-glycosylation with serine- and threonine-rich stretches within the amino acid sequence. Mucins, such as membrane-associated MUC1, are perhaps the best known family of proteins that are heavily O-glycosylated. Their altered expression and aberrant glycosylation have made them potential targets as biomarkers for early detection of cancer (7). Immunoglobulin A1 (IgA1)1 contains both O- and N-glycans (Fig. 1). Aberrant O-glycosylation of IgA1 is involved in the pathogenesis of IgA nephropathy (IgAN) and the closely related Henoch-Schönlein purpura nephritis (1, 8). Interestingly, the aberrantly glycosylated molecules, IgA1 in IgAN and MUC1 in cancer, are recognized by the immune system as neoepitopes as evidenced by formation of specific antibodies (911). Mucin-like bacterial surface proteins exhibit similar properties: the molecules have clustered bacterial O-glycans that mediate cellular adhesion, and blocking antibodies target these glycan-containing epitopes (12).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.IgA1 structural elements. IgA1 has N-linked glycans (filled circles) and O-linked glycans (open circles). The O-glycosylated sites are in the HR between the first and second constant region domains of the heavy chains. The HR is a Pro-rich segment with nine possible sites of O-glycan attachment. Underlined serine and threonine residues are usually glycosylated (31). Arrows show cleavage sites of trypsin and IgA-specific proteases.An O-glycosylated protein from a single source contains a population of variably O-glycosylated isoforms that show a distinct distribution of microheterogeneity of the O-glycan chains in terms of number, sites of attachment, and composition. Characterizing these clustered sites and understanding how the distributions change under different biological conditions or disease states are an analytical challenge. Enzymatic or chemical release of O-glycans is not selective. The heterogeneity, composition, and quantitative aspects of different O-glycan chains can be assessed and quantified by gas chromatographic and/or mass spectrometric techniques. However, the site-specific information and context of location and composition of adjacent chains are lost. Carbohydrate-specific lectin analysis of O-glycoproteins can provide information on glycan composition and comparative differences between samples, such as those from healthy controls and patients with various disease states. We have successfully demonstrated this in the analysis of IgA1 O-glycans from patients with IgAN versus healthy controls and disease controls (1315). This included proximal assessment of sites with galactose (Gal)-deficient O-glycans after digests with IgA-specific proteases (8). Several studies have demonstrated the value of mass spectrometry (MS) in identifying Gal-deficient IgA1 in patients with IgAN (1621), including our work that demonstrated the first direct localization of native sites of O-glycan chains in the hinge region (HR) of IgA1 by use of electron capture dissociation (ECD) (20, 22). ECD and the more recently developed electron transfer dissociation (ETD) have been used to identify sites of O-glycosylation on a variety of proteins (2326). This includes the analysis of sites of O-glycosylation by on-line LC-ECD/ETD MS/MS methods (23, 26, 27).IgAN is the most common primary glomerulonephritis worldwide (28) with about 20–40% of patients developing end stage renal failure. It is characterized by mesangial deposits of IgA1-containing immune complexes (28). The distinctive O-glycan chains of IgA1 molecules play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of IgAN (1, 10, 1416, 29, 30). IgA1 contains an HR between the first and second heavy chain constant region domains with a high content of Ser, Thr, and Pro. This segment usually has three to five O-glycan chains per HR (31) (see Fig. 1). Aberrantly glycosylated IgA1, deficient in Gal in some of the O-glycans in the HR, in serum is rare in healthy individuals but is present at elevated levels in IgAN patients (13, 15). This distinctive IgA1 is in circulating immune complexes (8, 10, 15) and in the glomerular deposits of IgAN patients (16, 29). The absence of Gal apparently leads to the exposure of neoepitopes, including terminal and sialylated N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) residues (9, 10). These epitopes are recognized by naturally occurring anti-glycan IgG or IgA1 antibodies and, consequently, circulating immune complexes are formed (9, 10, 15) that can deposit in the glomerular mesangia. To identify the pathogenic forms of IgA1, a thorough analysis of O-glycan microheterogeneity, including identification of the attachment sites, will be required.In this work, we demonstrate the complete analysis of O-glycoform microheterogeneity and site localization of the glycoforms in a naturally Gal-deficient IgA1 (Ale) myeloma protein that mimics the nephritogenic IgA1 in patients with IgAN (8, 9). Reversed phase (RP) LC FT-ICR MS successfully identified 10 distinct IgA1 HR fragments representing >99% of total IgA1. AI-ECD of the six most abundant IgA1 HR glycoforms (>95% of total IgA1) was accomplished with three distinct IgA-specific protease + trypsin digestions, identifying sites of Gal deficiency across four distinct IgA1 O-glycoforms. Based on the success of the ECD fragmentation of these IgA1 HR fragments, we adapted the analysis for on-line LC-MS/MS methods for both ECD and ETD. The variety of IgA1 HR proteolytic fragments provides a practical set of guidelines for the ECD/ETD analysis of clustered sites of O-glycosylation on this and other proteins. These results also provide insight into the order of attachment of the O-glycans in the IgA1 HR.
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