Isolation of Glycoproteins and Identification of Their N-Linked Glycosylation Sites
Protein glycosylation has long been recognized as a very common posttranslational modifi- cation. Protein glycosylation is prevalent in proteins destined for extracellular environments. These include proteins localized on the extracellular surface and those secreted to body fluids. In search of a method that has the potential to identify and quantify most proteins found in body fluids or the cell surface, we have recently developed a novel method for solid-phase extraction of formerly N -linked glycosylated peptides from glycoproteins. It has been shown that proteins secreted to body fluids or localized on the cell surface can be specifically enriched by this method. The technique is based on the conjugation of glycoproteins to a solid support using hydrazide chemistry, removal of nonglycosylated peptides by trypsin digestion, stable isotope labeling of glycopeptides, and the specific release of formerly N -linked glycosylated peptides via peptide-N -glycosidase. The recovered formerly N -linked glycopeptides are then identified and quantified by tandem mass spectrometry.
- On-Bead and Solution Screening Approaches for Genomically Derived Targets: Discovery of Surrogate Ligands and Substrates Using C
- 協同進化
- An Enzymatic-HPLC Assay to Monitor Endogenous d-Serine Release from Neuronal Cultures
- Lipases: An Overview
- 蛋白質的性質與鑒定
- Assessing Effects of Alcohol Consumption on Protein Synthesis in Striated Muscles
- 發熱的概念
- Surface Plasmon Resonance Mass Spectrometry for Protein Analysis
- 雞傳染性法氏囊病病毒抗體(IBDV-Ab)酶聯免疫分析(ELISA)
- 生物色(biological coloration)