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Featured researches published by Chu-Wei Kuo.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2012

Rapid glycopeptide enrichment and N-glycosylation site mapping strategies based on amine-functionalized magnetic nanoparticles.

Chu-Wei Kuo; I-Lin Wu; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Kay-Hooi Khoo

Glycoproteins secreted or expressed on the cell surface at specific pathophysiological stages are well-recognized disease biomarkers and therapeutic targets. While mapping of specific glycan structures can be performed at the level of released glycans, site-specific glycosylation and identification of specific protein carriers can only be determined by analysis of glycopeptides. A key enabling step in mass spectrometry (MS)-based glycoproteomics is the ability to selectively or non-selectively enrich for the glycopeptides from a total pool of a digested proteome for MS analysis since the highly heterogeneous glycopeptides are usually present at low abundance and ionize poorly compared with non-glycosylated peptides. Among the most common approaches for non-destructive and non-glycan-selective glycopeptide enrichment are strategies based on various forms of hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC). We present here a variation of this method using amine-derivatized Fe3O4 nanoparticles, in concert with in situ peptide N-glycosidase F digestion for direct matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization–mass spectrometry analysis of N-glycosylation sites and the released glycans. Conditions were also optimized for efficient elution of the enriched glycopeptides from the nanoparticles for on-line nanoflow liquid chromatography–MS/MS analysis. Successful applications to single glycoproteins as well as total proteomic mixtures derived from biological fluids established the unrivaled practical versatility of this method, with enrichment efficiency comparable to other HILIC-based methods.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2014

A new insect cell glycoengineering approach provides baculovirus-inducible glycogene expression and increases human-type glycosylation efficiency

Ann M. Toth; Chu-Wei Kuo; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Donald L. Jarvis

Insect cells are often glycoengineered using DNA constructs encoding foreign glyocoenzymes under the transcriptional control of the baculovirus immediate early promoter, ie1. However, we recently found that the delayed early baculovirus promoter, 39K, provides inducible and higher levels of transgene expression than ie1 after baculovirus infection (Lin and Jarvis, 2013). Thus, the purpose of this study was to assess the utility of the 39K promoter for insect cell glycoengineering. We produced two polyclonal transgenic insect cell populations in parallel using DNA constructs encoding foreign glycoenzymes under either ie1 (Sfie1SWT) or 39K (Sf39KSWT) promoter control. The surface of Sfie1SWT cells was constitutively sialylated, whereas the Sf39KSWT cell surface was only strongly sialylated after baculovirus infection, indicating Sf39KSWT cells were inducibly-glycoengineered. All nine glycogene-related transcript levels were induced by baculovirus infection of Sf39KSWT cells and most reached higher levels in Sf39KSWT than in Sfie1SWT cells at early times after infection. Similarly, galactosyltransferase activity, sialyltransferase activity, and sialic acid levels were induced and reached higher levels in baculovirus-infected Sf39KSWT cells. Finally, two different recombinant glycoproteins produced by baculovirus-infected Sf39KSWT cells had lower proportions of paucimannose-type and higher proportions of sialylated, complex-type N-glycans than those produced by baculovirus-infected Sfie1SWT cells. Thus, the 39K promoter provides baculovirus-inducible expression of foreign glycogenes, higher glycoenzyme activity levels, and higher human-type N-glycan processing efficiencies than the ie1 promoter, indicating that this delayed early baculovirus promoter has great utility for insect cell glycoengineering.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

Glycomics and Proteomics Analyses of Mouse Uterine Luminal Fluid Revealed a Predominance of Lewis Y and X Epitopes on Specific Protein Carriers

Chu-Wei Kuo; Chin-Mei Chen; Ying-Chu Lee; Sin-Tak Chu; Kay-Hooi Khoo

Sperm motility and maturation are known to be affected by a host of factors encountered en route in both male and female genital tracts prior to fertilization. Using a concerted proteomics and glycomics approach with advanced mass spectrometry-based glycan sequencing capability, we show in this work that 24p3, an abundant mouse uterine luminal fluid (ULF) glycoprotein also called lipocalin 2 (Lcn2), is highly fucosylated in the context of carrying multiple Lewis X and Y epitopes on complex type N-glycans at its single glycosylation site. The predominance of Lewis X/Y along with Neu5Acα2–6 sialylation was found to be a salient feature of the ULF glycome, and several other protein carriers were additionally identified including the highly abundant lactotransferrin, which is N-glycosylated at two sites, both with a similar range of highly fucosylated N-glycans. A comparative glycomics analysis of the male genital tract fluids revealed that there is a gradient of glycomic complexity from the cauda to caput regions of the epididymis, varying from high mannose to sialylated complex type N-glycans but mostly devoid of fucosylation. The seminal vesicle fluid glycome, on the other hand, carries equally abundant multimeric Lewis X structures but is distinctively lacking in additional fucosylation of the terminal galactose to give the Lewis Y epitope typifying the glycome of female ULF. One-dimensional shotgun proteomics analysis identified over 40 proteins in the latter, many of which are reported for the first time, and a majority are notably involved in immune defense and antigen processing. Further sperm binding and motility assays suggest that the Lewis X/Y epitopes do contribute to the sperm motility-enhancing activity of 24p3, whereas lactotransferrin is largely inactive in this context despite being similarly glycosylated. These findings underline the importance of glycoproteomics in delineating both the specific glycan structures and their carriers in assigning glycobiological functions.


Biotechnology Letters | 2011

Polysaccharides purified from the submerged culture of Ganoderma formosanum stimulate macrophage activation and protect mice against Listeria monocytogenes infection

Cheng-Li Wang; Chu-Wei Kuo; Yu-Jing Zhuang; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Wen-Hsiung Liu; Chun-Jen Chen

The bioactive components of Ganoderma formosanum have not yet been characterized. We investigated the immunomodulatory activities of the extracellular polysaccharides produced from a submerged mycelial culture of G. formosanum. The polysaccharides were mainly composed of d-mannose, d-galactose and d-glucose. After gel filtration chromatography, three polysaccharide fractions (PS-F1, PS-F2 and PS-F3) were purified. PS-F2 stimulated mouse RAW264.7 macrophages to produce TNF-α and nitric oxide, and enhanced the phagocytic activity of macrophages. PS-F2 challenge in mice triggered an acute inflammatory response characterized by the recruitment of neutrophils and monocytes, which protected mice from subsequent infection of Listeria monocytogenes. The results indicate that the heteropolysaccharides produced by G. formosanum can activate the innate immune response on macrophages.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Modifying an Insect Cell N-Glycan Processing Pathway Using CRISPR-Cas Technology.

Hideaki Mabashi-Asazuma; Chu-Wei Kuo; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Donald L. Jarvis

Fused lobes (FDL) is an enzyme that simultaneously catalyzes a key trimming reaction and antagonizes elongation reactions in the insect N-glycan processing pathway. Accordingly, FDL function accounts, at least in part, for major differences in the N-glycosylation patterns of glycoproteins produced by insect and mammalian cells. In this study, we used the CRISPR-Cas9 system to edit the fdl gene in Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells. CRISPR-Cas9 editing produced a high frequency of site-specific nucleotide insertions and deletions, reduced the production of insect-type, paucimannosidic products (Man3GlcNAc2), and led to the production of partially elongated, mammalian-type complex N-glycans (GlcNAc2Man3GlcNAc2) in S2 cells. As CRISPR-Cas9 has not been widely used to analyze or modify protein glycosylation pathways or edit insect cell genes, these results underscore its broad utility as a tool for these purposes. Our results also confirm the key role of FDL at the major branch point distinguishing insect and mammalian N-glycan processing pathways. Finally, the new FDL-deficient S2 cell derivative produced in this study will enable future bottom-up glycoengineering efforts designed to isolate insect cell lines that can efficiently produce recombinant glycoproteins with chemically predefined oligosaccharide side-chain structures.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2015

Engineering β1,4-galactosyltransferase I to reduce secretion and enhance N-glycan elongation in insect cells.

Christoph Geisler; Hideaki Mabashi-Asazuma; Chu-Wei Kuo; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Donald L. Jarvis

β1,4-galactosyltransferase I (B4GALT1) is a Golgi-resident enzyme that elongates glycoprotein glycans, but a subpopulation of this enzyme is secreted following proteolytic cleavage in its stem domain. We hypothesized that engineering B4GALT1 to block cleavage and secretion would enhance its retention and, therefore, its function. To test this hypothesis, we replaced the cytoplasmic/transmembrane/stem (CTS) domains of B4GALT1 with those from human α1,3-fucosyltransferase 7 (FUT7), which is not cleaved and secreted. Expression of FUT7-CTS-B4GALT1 in insect cells produced lower levels of secreted and higher levels of intracellular B4GALT1 activity than the native enzyme. We also noted that the B4GALT1 used in our study had a leucine at position 282, whereas all other animal B4GALT1 sequences have an aromatic amino acid at this position. Thus, we examined the combined impact of changing the CTS domains and the amino acid at position 282 on intracellular B4GALT1 activity levels and N-glycan processing in insect cells. The results demonstrated a correlation between the levels of intracellular B4GALT1 activity and terminally galactosylated N-glycans, N-glycan branching, the appearance of hybrid structures, and reduced core fucosylation. Thus, engineering B4GALT1 to reduce its cleavage and secretion is an approach that can be used to enhance N-glycan elongation in insect cells.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2016

Direct mapping of additional modifications on phosphorylated O-glycans of α-dystroglycan by mass spectrometry analysis in conjunction with knocking out of causative genes for dystroglycanopathy

Hirokazu Yagi; Chu-Wei Kuo; Takayuki Obayashi; Satoshi Ninagawa; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Koichi Kato

Dystroglycanopathy is a major class of congenital muscular dystrophy caused by a deficiency of functional glycans on α-dystroglycan (αDG) with laminin-binding activity. Recent advances have led to identification of several causative gene products of dystroglycanopathy and characterization of their in vitro enzymatic activities. However, the in vivo functional roles remain equivocal for enzymes such as ISPD, FKTN, FKRP, and TMEM5 that are supposed to be involved in post-phosphoryl modifications linking the GalNAc-β3-GlcNAc-β4-Man-6-phosphate core and the outer laminin-binding glycans. Herein, by direct nano-LC-MS2/MS3 analysis of tryptic glycopeptides derived from a truncated recombinant αDG expressed in the wild-type and a panel of mutated cells deficient in one of these enzymes, we sought to define the full extent of variable modifications on this phosphorylated core O-glycan at the functional Thr317/Thr319 sites. We showed that the most abundant glycoforms carried a phosphorylated core at each of the two sites, with and without a single ribitol phosphate (RboP) extending from terminal HexNAc. At much lower signal intensity, a novel substituent tentatively assigned as glycerol phosphate (GroP) was additionally detected. As expected, tandem RboP extended with a GlcA-Xyl unit was only identified in wild type, whereas knocking out of either ISPD or FKTN prevented formation of RboP. In the absence of FKRP, glycoforms with single but not tandem RboP accumulated, consistent with the suggested role of this enzyme in transferring the second RboP. Intriguingly, the single GroP modification also required functional FKTN whereas absence of TMEM5 significantly hindered only the addition of RboP. Our findings thus revealed additional levels of complexity associated with the core structures, suggesting functional interplay among these enzymes through their interactions. The simplified analytical workflow developed here should facilitate rapid mapping across a wider range of cell types to gain better insights into its physiological relevance.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2015

Targeted Glycoengineering Extends the Protein N-glycosylation Pathway in the Silkworm Silk Gland

Hideaki Mabashi-Asazuma; Bonghee Sohn; Youngsoo Kim; Chu-Wei Kuo; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Cheryl A. Kucharski; Malcolm J. Fraser; Donald L. Jarvis

The silkworm silk glands are powerful secretory organs that can produce and secrete proteins at high levels. As such, it has been suggested that the biosynthetic and secretory power of the silk gland can be harnessed to produce and secrete recombinant proteins in tight or loose association with silk fibers. However, the utility of the silkworm platform is constrained by the fact that it has a relatively primitive protein N-glycosylation pathway, which produces relatively simple insect-type, rather than mammalian-type N-glycans. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time that the silk gland protein N-glycosylation pathway can be glycoengineered. We accomplished this by using a dual piggyBac vector encoding two distinct mammalian glycosyltransferases under the transcriptional control of a posterior silk gland (PSG)-specific promoter. Both mammalian transgenes were expressed and each mammalian N-glycan processing activity was induced in transformed silkworm PSGs. In addition, the transgenic animals produced endogenous glycoproteins containing significant proportions of mammalian-type, terminally galactosylated N-glycans, while the parental animals produced none. This demonstration of the ability to glycoengineer the silkworm extends its potential utility as a recombinant protein production platform.


Proteomics | 2014

Facile removal of high mannose structures prior to extracting complex type N‐glycans from de‐N‐glycosylated peptides retained by C18 solid phase to allow more efficient glycomic mapping

Chi-Hung Lin; Chu-Wei Kuo; Donald L. Jarvis; Kay-Hooi Khoo

The relative amount of high mannose structures within an N‐glycomic pool differs from one source to another, but quite often it predominates over the larger size complex type structures carrying biologically important glyco‐epitopes. An efficient method to separate these two classes of N‐glycans would significantly aid in detecting the lower abundant components by MS. Capitalizing on an initial observation that only high mannose type structures were recovered in the flow‐through fraction when peptide‐N‐glycosidase F digested peptides were passed through a C18 cartridge in 0.1% formic acid, we demonstrated here that native complex type N‐glycans can be retained by C18 cartridge and to be efficiently separated from both the smaller high mannose type structures, as well as de‐N‐glycosylated peptides by stepwise elution with increasing ACN concentration. The weak retention of the largely hydrophilic N‐glycans on C18 resin is dependent not only on size but also increased by the presence of α6‐fucosylation. This was shown by comparing the resulting N‐glycomic profiles of the washed and low‐ACN eluted fractions derived from both a human cancer cell line and an insect cell line.


FEBS Letters | 2013

Attenuation of fibroblast growth factor signaling by poly-N-acetyllactosamine type glycans

Kazuhiro Sugihara; Toshiaki K. Shibata; Kayoko Takata; Takako Kimura; Naohiro Kanayama; Roy Williams; Shingo Hatakeyama; Tomoya O. Akama; Chu-Wei Kuo; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Michiko N. Fukuda

Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and their receptors are expressed in a variety of mammalian tissues, playing a role in development and cell proliferation. While analyzing human sperm motility, we found that sperm treated with endo‐β‐galactosidase (EBG), which specifically hydrolyzes poly‐N‐acetyllactosamine type glycans (polyLacs), enhanced motility. Mass spectrometry analysis revealed that sperm‐associated polyLacs are heavily fucosylated, consistent with Lewis Y antigen. Immunohistochemistry of epididymis using an anti‐Lewis Y antibody before and after EBG treatment suggested that polyLacs carrying the Lewis Y epitope are synthesized in epididymal epithelia and secreted to seminal fluid. EBG‐treated sperm elevated cAMP levels and calcium influx, indicating activation of fibroblast growth factor signaling. Seminal fluid polyLacs bound to FGFs in vitro, and impaired FGF‐mediated signaling in HEK293T cells.

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Cheng-Li Wang

National Taiwan University

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Chin-Her Chen

National Taiwan University of Science and Technology

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Chun-Jen Chen

National Taiwan University

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