If you've ever tried to look for a glycopeptide in any type of MS/MS spectra you know how very very rare it is that you get all of the information that you're looking for.
If you want to get full sequence coverage of everything it's probably going to take ETD and 2 different energies of collision dissociation of some kind. The clever combinations of energies certainly help get you more fragments, but they also increase the background complexity. "Is that 8ppm away from the b5 ion or could that actually be the NeuNaC is the third sugar in which case that's the 3 ppm off of the z4 after the loss of a less likely HexNaC at the end? (I possibly made that up because it's equally funny to me if that is a chemical impossibility or if it isn't).
Do you need ALL the info, though? Sometimes I just want to know things like "did this drug increase the number of spectra with glycan related oxonium ions". I definitely do want to know more than that, but that's what I know how to do with some clever R scripts Conor Jenkins wrote me almost 10 years ago.
How do you get to real information - and spectra - for glycopeptides in your data in an easy way?
You don't.
Until now! Hello GlyCounter!
You're probably assuming "cool, now I just need someone to download some crappy python scripts, fix them and then make me a dummies guide on how to run them."
NOPE! Check this out! I wouldn't write about it if it was the python thingy, probably.
It's a slick little GUI that takes straight RAW files or mzMLs! Click your options (including whether you used UVPD or ETD(!!!!!!!) and it does the rest, including
kick out handy IPSA annotated spectra! Important - if you are using a non-Thermo format and convert your data to mzML you don't want to compress them. In MSConvert, turn off that thing. Honestly, that thing messes up a lot of other workflows. If you're converting through FragPipe, it might convert them by default depending on what version of FragPipe you're using.
Gotta run, but if you need a solid new and approachable toolkit for glycan modifications, you should absolutely check this out.