Merck
CN
  • Screening neutral and acidic IgG N-glycans by high density electrophoresis.

Screening neutral and acidic IgG N-glycans by high density electrophoresis.

Glycoconjugate journal (1999-12-01)
E R Frears, A H Merry, J S Axford
ABSTRACT

IgG carries bi-antennary N-linked glycans which differ in degrees of galactosylation, core fucosylation and bisecting N-acetyl glucosamine. The majority of these are non-sialyated closely related neutral structures which can be resolved by HPLC analysis, but which are difficult to separate in techniques such as fluorophore-coupled carbohydrate electrophoresis. Derivatisation with the singly charged fluorophore, 2-amino benzoic acid and separation in gels with a 30% monomer content in tris/glycine buffer enabled separation of neutral glycans. In particular, agalactosyl glycans with either a core fucose substitution or bisecting N-acetyl galactosamine could be resolved. Good separation of mono- and di-galactosylated glycans was also achieved with this system. It was shown that IgG can be separated from serum by size-exclusion and anion exchange chromatography with minimal contamination, with complete glycan release accomplished by the enzyme peptide-N-glycosidase F (F. meningosepticum). This method of resolving IgG glycans could be used to monitor patients in which glycosylation changes may have a diagnostic value, as in rheumatoid arthritis. It could also be used to monitor recombinant IgG glycosylation where routine screening is required in the biotechnology industry.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
TRIS Glycine buffer solution, BioUltra, 10× concentrate