Edge A S, Weber P
Carbohydr Res. 1984 Mar 15;126(2):279-85. doi: 10.1016/0008-6215(84)85385-9.
The oligosaccharide products resulting from treatment of mucin-type glycoproteins with alkali in the presence of the sulfite anion have been investigated. Treatment of fetuin and of tryptic glycopeptides from the human erythrocyte with this reagent resulted in the release of sulfited oligosaccharides identified as N-acetylsulfohexosamine (HexNAcSO3), alpha-NeuAc-(2----6)-HexNAcSO3, and alpha-NeuAc-(2----3)-Gal-(1----3 or 4)-[GlcNAc-(1----6)]-HexNAcSO3. In addition, 2.7 moles of sialic acid were released per mole of alpha-NeuAc-(2----6)-HexNAcSO3 from fetuin. The sulfohexosamine moiety is formed via unsaturated intermediates from a 3-O-substituted 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-galactosyl residue at the carbohydrate-peptide linkage site when this residue is not substituted at O-4 by another sugar residue. A reaction mechanism accounting for the release of the sulfited oligosaccharides from a 3-O- and 6-O-substituted hexosamine is proposed in which the oligosaccharide branch attached to O-6 is obtained as a specific fragment terminating in sulfohexosamine.