A New Strategy Coupling Ion-Mobility-Selective CID and Cryogenic IR Spectroscopy to Identify Glycan Anomers

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Abstract

Determining the primary structure of glycans remains challenging due to their isomeric complexity. While high-resolution ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) has recently allowed distinguishing between many glycan isomers, the arrival-time distributions (ATDs) frequently exhibit multiple peaks, which can arise from positional isomers, reducing-end anomers, or different conformations. Here, we present the combination of ultrahigh-resolution ion mobility, collision-induced dissociation (CID), and cryogenic infrared (IR) spectroscopy as a systematic method to identify reducing-end anomers of glycans. Previous studies have suggested that high-resolution ion mobility of sodiated glycans is able to separate the two reducing-end anomers. In this case, Y-fragments generated from mobility-separated precursor species should also contain a single anomer at their reducing end. We confirm that this is the case by comparing the IR spectra of selected Y-fragments to those of anomerically pure mono- and disaccharides, allowing the assignment of the mobility-separated precursor and its IR spectrum to a single reducing-end anomer. The anomerically pure precursor glycans can henceforth be rapidly identified on the basis of their IR spectrum alone, allowing them to be distinguished from other isomeric forms.

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Pellegrinelli, R. P., Yue, L., Carrascosa, E., Ben Faleh, A., Warnke, S., Bansal, P., & Rizzo, T. R. (2022). A New Strategy Coupling Ion-Mobility-Selective CID and Cryogenic IR Spectroscopy to Identify Glycan Anomers. Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry, 33(5), 859–864. https://doi.org/10.1021/jasms.2c00043

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