Identification and characterization of intact glycopeptides in human urine

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Abstract

Glycoproteins in urine have the potential to provide a rich class of informative molecules for studying human health and disease. Despite this promise, the urine glycoproteome has been largely uncharacterized. Here, we present the analysis of glycoproteins in human urine using LC–MS/MS-based intact glycopeptide analysis, providing both the identification of protein glycosites and characterization of the glycan composition at specific glycosites. Gene enrichment analysis reveals differences in biological processes, cellular components, and molecular functions in the urine glycoproteome versus the urine proteome, as well as differences based on the major glycan class observed on proteins. Meta-heterogeneity of glycosylation is examined on proteins to determine the variation in glycosylation across multiple sites of a given protein with specific examples of individual sites differing from the glycosylation trends in the overall protein. Taken together, this dataset represents a potentially valuable resource as a baseline characterization of glycoproteins in human urine for future urine glycoproteomics studies.

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Garcia-Marques, F., Fuller, K., Bermudez, A., Shamsher, N., Zhao, H., Brooks, J. D., … Pitteri, S. J. (2024). Identification and characterization of intact glycopeptides in human urine. Scientific Reports, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-53299-3

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