Endoglycosidase H (Endo H) is a recombinant glycosidase cloned from Streptomyces plicatus and overexpressed in E. coli. Endo H cleaves the chitobiose core of high mannose and a limited number of hybrid oligosaccharides from N-linked glycoproteins. It does not cleave complex glycans. Enzymatic cleavage is between the two N-acetylglucosamine residues in the diacetylchitobiose core of the oligosaccharide, leaving one N-acetylglucosamine residue on the asparagine. This is in contrast to PNGase F, which cleaves all asparagine-linked oligosaccharides.
Unit Definition: One unit is defined as the amount of enzyme required to remove >95% of the carbohydrate from 10μg of denatured RNase B in 1 hour at 37°C in a total reaction volume of 10μl.
Applications
- Determining the state of protein glycosylation
- Characterizing glycan structure
References
- Maley, F. et al. (1989) Anal. Biochem. 180, 195–204.
References using Endo H to monitor protein trafficking:
- Taner, S. et al. (2011) J. Immunol. 186, 62–72.
- Beyer, S. et al. (2011) Endo. 152, 782–92.
- Chen, Z. et al. (2011) J. Exper. Med. 208, 2633–40.
- Iavarone, C. et al. (2011) J. Immunol. 186, 4213–22.
- Guo, Y. et al. (2011) J. Exper. Med. 208, 2083–98.