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Contextualised real-time mass spectrometry improves glycosylation detection and characterisation

Created on 04 Jul 2026

Authors

Kelly, M. I., Ashwood, C.

Abstract

Glycosylation is a structurally diverse, non-template-driven modification whose analysis by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry is constrained by discovery-mode acquisition rules developed for proteomics. Data-dependent acquisition filters, such as intensity-based precursor selection and charge-state exclusion, map poorly onto glycan analysis, which span wide ranges of charge state and abundance independent of their biological importance. Here we present glycosylation real-time mass spectrometry (GlycoRTMS), an instrument-API method that annotates observed precursor masses with glycan compositions in real time and uses this context to guide fragmentation. Composition-aware precursor prioritisation sampled deeper into the precursor space, expanding MS2 coverage of a hyaluronic acid hydrolysate from four to eight oligosaccharide subunits. Charge-state-specific collision energy equations tailored to oligosaccharides produced complete fragment ladders where fixed normalised collision energy did not. MS3 triggering gated by both diagnostic ions and glycan composition matching enabled efficient, chromatography-compatible characterisation of O-acetylated sialic acids and identified product ions specific to O-acetylation. Together, these strategies improve both the depth and quality of glycan detection and characterisation within a single injection.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 04 Jul 2026.

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