Charting the Proteoform Landscape of Serum Proteins in Individual Donors by High-Resolution Native Mass Spectrometry

  • Dario A.T. Cramer
  • , Vojtech Franc
  • , Tomislav Caval
  • , Albert J.R. Heck*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Most proteins in serum are glycosylated, with several annotated as biomarkers and thus diagnostically important and of interest for their role in disease. Most methods for analyzing serum glycoproteins employ either glycan release or glycopeptide centric mass spectrometry-based approaches, which provide excellent tools for analyzing known glycans but neglect previously undefined or unknown glycosylation and/or other co-occurring modifications. High-resolution native mass spectrometry is a relatively new technique for the analysis of intact glycoproteins, providing a "what you see is what you get"mass profile of a protein, allowing the qualitative and quantitative observation of all modifications present. So far, a disadvantage of this approach has been that it centers mostly on just one specific serum glycoprotein at the time. To address this issue, we introduce an ion-exchange chromatography-based fractionation method capable of isolating and analyzing, in parallel, over 20 serum (glyco)proteins, covering a mass range between 30 and 190 kDa, from 150 μL of serum. Although generating data in parallel for all these 20 proteins, we focus the discussion on the very complex proteoform profiles of four selected proteins, i.e., α-1-antitrypsin, ceruloplasmin, hemopexin, and complement protein C3. Our analyses provide an insight into the extensive proteoform landscape of serum proteins in individual donors, caused by the occurrence of various N- and O-glycans, protein cysteinylation, and co-occurring genetic variants. Moreover, native mass intact mass profiling also provided an edge over alternative approaches revealing the presence of apo- and holo-forms of ceruloplasmin and the endogenous proteolytic processing in plasma of among others complement protein C3. We also applied our approach to a small cohort of serum samples from healthy and diseased individuals. In these, we qualitatively and quantitatively monitored the changes in proteoform profiles of ceruloplasmin and revealed a substantial increase in fucosylation and glycan occupancy in patients with late-stage hepatocellular carcinoma and pancreatic cancer as compared to healthy donor samples.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)12732-12741
Number of pages10
JournalAnalytical Chemistry
Volume94
Issue number37
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Sept 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We acknowledge support from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) funding the Netherlands Proteomics Centre through the X-omics Road Map program (project 184.034.019). D.A.T.C., V.F., and A.J.R.H. acknowledge further support by the NWO Satin Grant 731.017.202. We would like to thank Dr. Karli Reiding and Dr. Victor Yin (Utrecht University) for helpful discussions and Jacques Paul (Favonian) for help with the development of the automation.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society.

Funding

We acknowledge support from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) funding the Netherlands Proteomics Centre through the X-omics Road Map program (project 184.034.019). D.A.T.C., V.F., and A.J.R.H. acknowledge further support by the NWO Satin Grant 731.017.202. We would like to thank Dr. Karli Reiding and Dr. Victor Yin (Utrecht University) for helpful discussions and Jacques Paul (Favonian) for help with the development of the automation.

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