Molecules (Nov 2024)
Improved Detection of Polysulfated Oligosaccharides by Mass Spectrometry Applicable to Miniaturized Samples
Abstract
The study of biomolecules and their interactions in their natural environment requires increasingly sophisticated technological and methodological developments. The complexity of these developments is due, among other things, to the nature of these molecules and the small quantities available depending on their origin. In this context, this study focuses on the conditions for improving the detection of glycosaminoglycans on a miniaturized scale by mass spectrometry. These multicharged anionic linear polysaccharides are in fact difficult to study by mass spectrometry and can present, for a given molecule, a large number of signals linked to different charge states, to the loss of one or more sulfate groups and to the presence of different adducts, which reduces sensitivity and complicates the interpretation of the spectra. In order to reduce this complexity, we have investigated different sample preparation methods applicable to small sample volumes. The development of home-made capillary ion-exchange columns, for example, makes it possible to control the adducts formed in nano-ESI coupling. However, their use on a miniaturized scale for detection by MALDI-TOF-MS does not allow for performances as high as those obtained with treatment with a commercial DOWEXTM resin. However, experimental results allowed us to demonstrate that the presence of DOWEXTM resin colloid residues in the aqueous phase greatly improves the quality of the spectra obtained by MALDI-TOFMS on a Fondaparinux model glycosaminoglycan.
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