Title
O-methylated N-glycans Distinguish Mosses from Vascular Plants
Author
David Stenitzer
Institute of Biochemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences
Author
Réka Mócsai
Institute of Biochemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences
... show all
Abstract
In the animal kingdom, a stunning variety of N-glycan structures have emerged with phylogenetic specificities of various kinds. In the plant kingdom, however, N-glycosylation appears to be strictly conservative and uniform. From mosses to all kinds of gymno- and angiosperms, land plants mainly express structures with the common pentasaccharide core substituted with xylose, core α1,3-fucose, maybe terminal GlcNAc residues and Lewis A determinants. In contrast, green algae biosynthesise unique and unusual N-glycan structures with uncommon monosaccharides, a plethora of different structures and various kinds of O-methylation. Mosses, a group of plants that are separated by at least 400 million years of evolution from vascular plants, have hitherto been seen as harbouring an N-glycosylation machinery identical to that of vascular plants. To challenge this view, we analysed the N-glycomes of several moss species using MALDI-TOF/TOF, PGC-MS/MS and GC-MS. While all species contained the plant-typical heptasaccharide with no, one or two terminal GlcNAc residues (MMXF, MGnXF and GnGnXF, respectively), many species exhibited MS signals with 14.02 Da increments as characteristic for O-methylation. Throughout all analysed moss N-glycans, the level of methylation differed strongly even within the same family. In some species, methylated glycans dominated, while others had no methylation at all. GC-MS revealed the main glycan from Funaria hygrometrica to contain 2,6-O-methylated terminal mannose. Some mosses additionally presented very large, likewise methylated complex-type N-glycans. This first finding of the methylation of N-glycans in land plants mirrors the presumable phylogenetic relation of mosses to green algae, where the O-methylation of mannose and many other monosaccharides is a common trait.
Keywords
mossbryophytesglycoproteinN-glycanmethyl-mannose
Object type
Language
English [eng]
Persistent identifier
phaidra.univie.ac.at/o:1655494
Appeared in
Title
Biomolecules
Volume
12
Issue
1
ISSN
2218-273X
Issued
2022
Publication
MDPI AG
Date issued
2022
Access rights
Rights statement
© 2022 by the authors
University of Vienna | Universitätsring 1 | 1010 Vienna | T +43-1-4277-0