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Capsules are long-chain carbohydrate polymers that envelop the surfaces of many bacteria, protecting them from host immune responses. Capsule biosynthesis enzymes are potential drug targets and valuable biotechnological tools for generating vaccine antigens. Despite their importance, it remains unknown how structurally variable capsule polymers of Gram-negative pathogens are linked to the conserved glycolipid anchoring these virulence factors to the bacterial membrane. Using Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae as an example, we demonstrate that CpsA and CpsC generate a poly(glycerol-3-phosphate) linker to connect the glycolipid with capsules containing poly(galactosylglycerol-phosphate) backbones. We reconstruct the entire capsule biosynthesis pathway in A. pleuropneumoniae serotypes 3 and 7, solve the X-ray crystal structure of the capsule polymerase CpsD, identify its tetratricopeptide repeat domain as essential for elongating poly(glycerol-3-phosphate) and show that CpsA and CpsC stimulate CpsD to produce longer polymers. We identify the CpsA and CpsC product as a wall teichoic acid homolog, demonstrating similarity between the biosynthesis of Gram-positive wall teichoic acid and Gram-negative capsules.
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Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) mediate essential interactions throughout the extracellular matrix (ECM), providing signals that regulate cellular growth and development. Altered HSPG composition during tumorigenesis strongly aids cancer progression. Heparanase (HPSE) is the principal enzyme responsible for extracellular heparan sulfate catabolism and is markedly up-regulated in aggressive cancers. HPSE overactivity degrades HSPGs within the ECM, facilitating metastatic dissemination and releasing mitogens that drive cellular proliferation. Reducing extracellular HPSE activity reduces cancer growth, but few effective inhibitors are known, and none are clinically approved. Inspired by the natural glycosidase inhibitor cyclophellitol, we developed nanomolar mechanism-based, irreversible HPSE inhibitors that are effective within physiological environments. Application of cyclophellitol-derived HPSE inhibitors reduces cancer aggression in cellulo and significantly ameliorates murine metastasis. Mechanism-based irreversible HPSE inhibition is an unexplored anticancer strategy. We demonstrate the feasibility of such compounds to control pathological HPSE-driven malignancies.
Assuntos
Glucuronidase , Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases , Metástase Neoplásica , Animais , Proliferação de Células/efeitos dos fármacos , Glucuronidase/antagonistas & inibidores , Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases/farmacologia , Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases/uso terapêutico , Proteoglicanas de Heparan Sulfato/metabolismo , Heparitina Sulfato/metabolismo , Humanos , Camundongos , Metástase Neoplásica/tratamento farmacológicoRESUMO
Enzymatic modifications of bacterial exopolysaccharides enhance immune evasion and persistence during infection. In the Gram-negative opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, acetylation of alginate reduces opsonic killing by phagocytes and improves reactive oxygen species scavenging. Although it is well known that alginate acetylation in P. aeruginosa requires AlgI, AlgJ, AlgF, and AlgX, how these proteins coordinate polymer modification at a molecular level remains unclear. Here, we describe the structural characterization of AlgF and its protein interaction network. We characterize direct interactions between AlgF and both AlgJ and AlgX in vitro and demonstrate an association between AlgF and AlgX, as well as AlgJ and AlgI, in P. aeruginosa. We determine that AlgF does not exhibit acetylesterase activity and is unable to bind to polymannuronate in vitro. Therefore, we propose that AlgF functions to mediate protein-protein interactions between alginate acetylation enzymes, forming the periplasmic AlgJFXK (AlgJ-AlgF-AlgX-AlgK) acetylation and export complex required for robust biofilm formation.
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Alginatos , Pseudomonas aeruginosa , Acetilação , Alginatos/química , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Biofilmes , Periplasma/metabolismo , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolismoRESUMO
Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) is an effective technology for the identification and functional annotation of enzymes in complex biological samples. ABP designs are normally directed to an enzyme active site nucleophile, and within the field of Carbohydrate-Active Enzymes (CAZymes), ABPP has been most successful for those enzymes that feature such a residue: retaining glycosidases (GHs). Several mechanism-based covalent and irreversible retaining GH inhibitors have emerged over the past sixty years. ABP designs based on these inhibitor chemistries appeared since the turn of the millennium, and we contributed to the field by designing a suite of retaining GH ABPs modeled on the structure and mode of action of the natural product, cyclophellitol. These ABPs enable the study of both exo- and endo-acting retaining GHs in human health and disease, for instance in genetic metabolic disorders in which retaining GHs are deficient. They are also finding increasing use in the study of GHs in gut microbiota and environmental microorganisms, both in the context of drug (de)toxification in the gut and that of biomass polysaccharide processing for future sustainable energy and chemistries. This account comprises the authors' view on the history of mechanism-based retaining GH inhibitor design and discovery, on how these inhibitors served as blueprints for retaining GH ABP design, and on some current and future developments on how cyclophellitol-based ABPs may drive the discovery of retaining GHs and their inhibitors.
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Inibidores Enzimáticos , Glicosídeo Hidrolases , Glicosídeo Hidrolases/antagonistas & inibidores , Glicosídeo Hidrolases/metabolismo , Inibidores Enzimáticos/farmacologia , Inibidores Enzimáticos/química , HumanosRESUMO
Adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-ribosylation is a ubiquitous post-translational modification that regulates vital biological processes like histone reorganization and DNA-damage repair through the modification of various amino acid residues. Due to advances in mass-spectrometry, the collection of long-known ADP-ribose (ADPr) acceptor sites, e.g. arginine, cysteine and glutamic acid, has been expanded with serine, tyrosine and histidine, among others. Well-defined ADPr-peptides are valuable tools for investigating the exact structures, mechanisms of action and interaction partners of the different flavors of this modification. This review provides a comprehensive overview of synthetic and chemoenzymatic methodologies that enabled the construction of peptides mono-ADP-ribosylated on various amino acids, and close mimetics thereof.
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Ligands for Toll-like-receptor 2 (TLR2) have demonstrated significant potential as immune-stimulating components in synthetic vaccines. Activation of TLR2 relies on the formation of dimeric complexes with either TLR1 or TLR6 and the nature of these dimers can impact therapeutic outcomes. The lipopeptide-based TLR2 ligands Pam3CysSK4 and Pam2CysSK4 have been extensively studied, and their recognition by different TLR-receptor heterodimers, TLR2/TLR1 and TLR2/TLR6, respectively, has been established. However, the high lipophilicity of these ligands, containing multiple palmitoyl residues, can result in solubility issues when used as vaccine adjuvants. To address this, we previously synthesized a less lipophilic ligand containing a single palmitoyl chain called mini-UPam, which effectively stimulates human moDC maturation. We here probe the receptor-dimer specificity of several mini-Upam derivatives and reveal that these mini-UPam are hTLR2/TLR6 selective ligands and that the introduction of longer urea alkyl chains does not shift the binding specificity to hTLR2/TLR1 heterodimers, in contrast to their Pam2CysSK4 and Pam3CysSK4 counterparts, pointing to a different binding mode of the UPam ligands.
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Cyclophellitol is a potent and selective mechanism-based retaining ß-glucosidase inhibitor that has served as a versatile starting point for the development of activity-based glycosidase probes (ABPs). We developed routes of synthesis of eight mono- and dideoxycyclophellitols and cyclophellitol aziridines, the latter as ABPs carrying either a biotin or fluorophore linked to the aziridine nitrogen. We reveal the potency of these 24 compounds as inhibitors of the three human retaining ß-glucosidases, GBA1, GBA2 and GBA3. We show that 3,6-dideoxy-ß-galacto-cyclophellitol aziridine selectively captures GBA3 over GBA1 and GBA2 in extracts of cells overexpressing both GBA2 and GBA3. We also identify a probe that selectively labels GBA1 and GBA2 over GBA3 at lower concentrations. In sum, the here-presented studies reveal new chemistries to prepare chiral, substituted cyclitol epoxides and aziridines, add to the growing suite of cyclophellitols varying in configuration and substitution pattern, and yielded a reagent that may find use to investigate the physiological role and therapeutic relevance of the most elusive of the three retaining ß-glucosidases: GBA3.
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Nucleophilic substitution reactions are elementary reactions in organic chemistry that are used in many synthetic routes. By quantum chemical methods, we have investigated the intrinsic competition between the backside SN2 (SN2-b) and frontside SN2 (SN2-f) pathways using a set of simple alkyl triflates as the electrophile in combination with a systematic series of phenols and partially fluorinated ethanol nucleophiles. It is revealed how and why the well-established mechanistic preference for the SN2-b pathway slowly erodes and can even be overruled by the unusual SN2-f substitution mechanism going from strong to weak alcohol nucleophiles. Activation strain analyses disclose that the SN2-b pathway is favored for strong alcohol nucleophiles because of the well-known intrinsically more efficient approach to the electrophile resulting in a more stabilizing nucleophile-electrophile interaction. In contrast, the preference of weaker alcohol nucleophiles shifts to the SN2-f pathway, benefiting from a stabilizing hydrogen bond interaction between the incoming alcohol and the leaving group. This hydrogen bond interaction is strengthened by the increased acidity of the weaker alcohol nucleophiles, thereby steering the mechanistic preference toward the frontside SN2 pathway.
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Glycoconjugate vaccines are based on chemical conjugation of pathogen-associated carbohydrates with immunogenic carrier proteins and are considered a very cost-effective way to prevent infections. Most of the licensed glycoconjugate vaccines are composed of saccharide antigens extracted from bacterial sources. However, synthetic oligosaccharide antigens have become a promising alternative to natural polysaccharides with the advantage of being well-defined structures providing homogeneous conjugates. Haemophilus influenzae (Hi) is responsible for a number of severe diseases. In recent years, an increasing rate of invasive infections caused by Hi serotype a (Hia) raised some concern, because no vaccine targeting Hia is currently available. The capsular polysaccharide (CPS) of Hia is constituted by phosphodiester-linked 4-ß-d-glucose-(1â4)-d-ribitol-5-(PO4â) repeating units and is the antigen for protein-conjugated polysaccharide vaccines. To investigate the antigenic potential of the CPS from Hia, we synthesized related saccharide fragments containing up to five repeating units. Following the synthetic optimization of the needed disaccharide building blocks, they were assembled using the phosphoramidite approach for the installation of the phosphodiester linkages. The resulting CPS-based Hia oligomers were conjugated to CRM197 carrier protein and evaluated inâ vivo for their immunogenic potential, showing that all glycoconjugates were capable of raising antibodies recognizing Hia synthetic fragments.
Assuntos
Glicoconjugados , Haemophilus influenzae , Glicoconjugados/química , Glicoconjugados/imunologia , Glicoconjugados/síntese química , Haemophilus influenzae/imunologia , Haemophilus influenzae/química , Animais , Vacinas Conjugadas/química , Vacinas Conjugadas/imunologia , Camundongos , Vacinas Anti-Haemophilus/imunologia , Vacinas Anti-Haemophilus/química , Proteínas de Bactérias/imunologia , Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Infecções por Haemophilus/prevenção & controle , Infecções por Haemophilus/imunologiaRESUMO
Glycoside hydrolases (glycosidases) take part in myriad biological processes and are important therapeutic targets. Competitive and mechanism-based inhibitors are useful tools to dissect their biological role and comprise a good starting point for drug discovery. The natural product, cyclophellitol, a mechanism-based, covalent and irreversible retaining ß-glucosidase inhibitor has inspired the design of diverse α- and ß-glycosidase inhibitor and activity-based probe scaffolds. Here, we sought to deepen our understanding of the structural and functional requirements of cyclophellitol-type compounds for effective human α-glucosidase inhibition. We synthesized a comprehensive set of α-configured 1,2- and 1,5a-cyclophellitol analogues bearing a variety of electrophilic traps. The inhibitory potency of these compounds was assessed towards both lysosomal and ER retaining α-glucosidases. These studies revealed the 1,5a-cyclophellitols to be the most potent retaining α-glucosidase inhibitors, with the nature of the electrophile determining inhibitory mode of action (covalent or non-covalent). DFT calculations support the ability of the 1,5a-cyclophellitols, but not the 1,2-congeners, to adopt conformations that mimic either the Michaelis complex or transition state of α-glucosidases.
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Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases , alfa-Glucosidases , Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases/química , Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases/farmacologia , Inibidores de Glicosídeo Hidrolases/síntese química , alfa-Glucosidases/metabolismo , alfa-Glucosidases/química , Humanos , Conformação Molecular , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Teoria da Densidade Funcional , CicloexanóisRESUMO
Aziridines are important structural motifs and intermediates, and several synthetic strategies for the direct aziridination of alkenes have been introduced. However, many of these strategies require an excess of activated alkene, suffer from competing side-reactions, have limited functional group tolerance, or involve precious transition metal-based catalysts. Herein, we demonstrate the direct aziridination of alkenes by combining sulfonyl azides as a triplet nitrene source with a catalytic amount of an organic dye functioning as photosensitizer. We show how the nature of the sulfonyl azide, in combination with the triplet-excited state energy of the photosensitizer, affects the aziridination yield and provide a mechanistic rationale to account for the observed dependence of the reaction yield on the nature of the organic dye and sulfonyl azide reagents. The optimized reaction conditions enable the aziridination of structurally diverse and complex alkenes, carrying various functional groups, with the alkene as the limiting reagent.
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Minimal structural differences in the structure of glycosyl donors can have a tremendous impact on their reactivity and the stereochemical outcome of their glycosylation reactions. Here, we used a combination of systematic glycosylation reactions, the characterization of potential reactive intermediates, and in-depth computational studies to study the disparate behavior of glycosylation systems involving benzylidene glucosyl and mannosyl donors. While these systems have been studied extensively, no satisfactory explanations are available for the differences observed between the 3-O-benzyl/benzoyl mannose and glucose donor systems. The potential energy surfaces of the different reaction pathways available for these donors provide an explanation for the contrasting behavior of seemingly very similar systems. Evidence has been provided for the intermediacy of benzylidene mannosyl 1,3-dioxanium ions, while the formation of the analogous 1,3-glucosyl dioxanium ions is thwarted by a prohibitively strong flagpole interaction of the C-2-O-benzyl group with the C-5 proton in moving toward the transition state, in which the glucose ring adopts a B2,5-conformation. This study provides an explanation for the intermediacy of 1,3-dioxanium ions in the mannosyl system and an answer to why these do not form from analogous glucosyl donors.
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The transfer of an adenosine diphosphate (ADP) ribose moiety to a nucleophilic side chain by consumption of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide is referred to as ADP-ribosylation, which allows for the spatiotemporal regulation of vital processes such as apoptosis and DNA repair. Recent mass-spectrometry based analyses of the "ADP-ribosylome" have identified histidine as ADP-ribose acceptor site. In order to study this modification, a fully synthetic strategy towards α-configured N(τ)- and N(π)-ADP-ribosylated histidine-containing peptides has been developed. Ribofuranosylated histidine building blocks were obtained via Mukaiyama-type glycosylation and the building blocks were integrated into an ADP-ribosylome derived peptide sequence using fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl (Fmoc)-based solid-phase peptide synthesis. On-resin installation of the ADP moiety was achieved using phosphoramidite chemistry, and global deprotection provided the desired ADP-ribosylated oligopeptides. The stability under various chemical conditions and resistance against (ADP-ribosyl) hydrolase-mediated degradation has been investigated to reveal that the constructs are stable under various chemical conditions and non-degradable by any of the known ADP-ribosylhydrolases.
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Histidina , Técnicas de Síntese em Fase Sólida , Histidina/metabolismo , Peptídeos/química , ADP-Ribosilação , Difosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Adenosina Difosfato Ribose/químicaRESUMO
The sulfolipid sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol (SQDG), produced by plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, constitutes a major sulfur reserve in the biosphere. Microbial breakdown of SQDG is critical for the biological utilization of its sulfur. This commences through release of the parent sugar, sulfoquinovose (SQ), catalyzed by sulfoquinovosidases (SQases). These vanguard enzymes are encoded in gene clusters that code for diverse SQ catabolic pathways. To identify, visualize and isolate glycoside hydrolase CAZY-familyâ 31 (GH31) SQases in complex biological environments, we introduce SQ cyclophellitol-aziridine activity-based probes (ABPs). These ABPs label the active site nucleophile of this enzyme family, consistent with specific recognition of the SQ cyclophellitol-aziridine in the active site, as evidenced in the 3D structure of Bacillus megaterium SQase. A fluorescent Cy5-probe enables visualization of SQases in crude cell lysates from bacteria harbouring different SQ breakdown pathways, whilst a biotin-probe enables SQase capture and identification by proteomics. The Cy5-probe facilitates monitoring of active SQase levels during different stages of bacterial growth which show great contrast to more traditional mRNA analysis obtained by RT-qPCR. Given the importance of SQases in global sulfur cycling and in human microbiota, these SQase ABPs provide a new tool with which to study SQase occurrence, activity and stability.
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Corantes Fluorescentes , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Glicosídeo Hidrolases/metabolismo , Glicosídeo Hidrolases/genética , Bacillus megaterium/enzimologia , Domínio Catalítico , Modelos Moleculares , MetilglucosídeosRESUMO
Zwitterionic polysaccharides (ZPSs) are exceptional carbohydrates, carrying both positively charged amine groups and negatively charged carboxylates, that can be loaded onto MHC-II molecules to activate T cells. It remains enigmatic, however, how these polysaccharides bind to these receptors, and to understand the structural features responsible for this "peptide-like" behavior, well-defined ZPS fragments are required in sufficient quantity and quality. We here present the first total synthesis of Bacteroides fragilis PS A1 fragments encompassing up to 12 monosaccharides, representing three repeating units. Key to our successful syntheses has been the incorporation of a C-3,C-6-silylidene-bridged "ring-inverted" galactosamine building block that was designed to act as an apt nucleophile as well as a stereoselective glycosyl donor. Our stereoselective synthesis route is further characterized by a unique protecting group strategy, built on base-labile protecting groups, which has allowed the incorporation of an orthogonal alkyne functionalization handle. Detailed structural studies have revealed that the assembled oligosaccharides take up a bent structure, which translates into a left-handed helix for larger PS A1 polysaccharides, presenting the key positively charged amino groups to the outside of the helix. The availability of the fragments and the insight into their secondary structure will enable detailed interaction studies with binding proteins to unravel the mode of action of these unique oligosaccharides at the atomic level.
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Bacteroides fragilis , Polissacarídeos Bacterianos , Polissacarídeos Bacterianos/química , Bacteroides fragilis/química , Oligossacarídeos , Monossacarídeos , Linfócitos TRESUMO
A single acyloxy group at C-2 can control the outcome of nucleophilic substitution reactions of pyran-derived acetals, but the extent of the neighboring-group participation depends on a number of factors. We show here that neighboring-group participation does not necessarily control the stereochemical outcome of acetal substitution reactions with weak nucleophiles. The 1,2-trans selectivity increased with increasing reactivity of the incoming nucleophile. This trend suggests the intermediacy of both cis-fused dioxolenium ions and oxocarbenium ions in the stereochemistry-determining step. In addition, as the electron-donating ability of the neighboring group decreased, the preference for the 1,2-trans products increased. Computational studies show how the barriers for the ring-opening reaction on the dioxolenium ions and the transition states to provide the oxocarbenium ions change with the electron-donating capacity of the C-2-acyloxy group and the reactivity of the nucleophile.
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Oxocarbenium ions are key reactive intermediates in organic chemistry. To generate a series of structure-reactivity-stereoselectivity principles for these species, we herein investigated the bimolecular electrophilic substitution reactions (SE 2') between allyltrimethylsilane and a series of archetypal six-membered ring oxocarbenium ions using a combined density functional theory (DFT) and coupled-cluster theory approach. These reactions preferentially proceed following a reaction path where the oxocarbenium ion transforms from a half chair (3 H4 or 4 H3 ) to a chair conformation. The introduction of alkoxy substituents on six-membered ring oxocarbenium ions, dramatically influences the conformational preference of the canonical 3 H4 and 4 H3 conformers, and thereby the stereochemical outcome of the SE 2' reaction. In general, we find that the stereoselectivity in the reactions correlates to the "intrinsic preference" of the cations, as dictated by their shape. However, for the C5-CH2 OMe substituent, steric factors override the "intrinsic preference", showing a more selective reaction than expected based on the shape of the ion. Our SE 2' energetics correlate well with experimentally observed stereoselectivity, and the use of the activation strain model has enabled us to quantify important interactions and structural features that occur in the transition state of the reactions to precisely understand the relative energy barriers of the diastereotopic addition reactions. The fundamental mechanistic insight provided in this study will aid in understanding the reactivity of more complex glycosyl cations featuring multiple substituents and will facilitate our general understanding of glycosylation reactions.
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Most lectins bind carbohydrate ligands with relatively low affinity, making the identification of optimal ligands challenging. Here we introduce a point accumulation in nanoscale topography (PAINT) super-resolution microscopy method to capture weak glycan-lectin interactions at the single-molecule level in living cells (Glyco-PAINT). Glyco-PAINT exploits weak and reversible sugar binding to directly achieve single-molecule detection and quantification in cells and is used to establish the relative kon and koff rates of a synthesized library of carbohydrate-based probes, as well as the diffusion coefficient of the receptor-sugar complex. Uptake of ligands correlates with their binding affinity and residence time to establish structure-function relations for various synthetic glycans. We reveal how sugar multivalency and presentation geometry can be optimized for binding and internalization. Overall, Glyco-PAINT represents a powerful approach to study weak glycan-lectin interactions on the surface of living cells, one that can be potentially extended to a variety of lectin-sugar interactions.
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Lectinas/química , Polissacarídeos/química , Imagem Individual de Molécula/métodos , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/química , Animais , Células CHO , Membrana Celular , Permeabilidade da Membrana Celular , Cricetulus , Cinética , Ligantes , Análise Multivariada , Ligação Proteica , Relação Estrutura-AtividadeRESUMO
Adenosine diphosphate ribosylation (ADP-ribosylation) is a crucial post-translational modification involved in important regulatory mechanisms of numerous cellular pathways including histone maintenance and DNA damage repair. To study this modification, well-defined ADP-ribosylated peptides, proteins, and close analogues thereof have been invaluable tools. Recently, proteomics studies have revealed histidine residues to be ADP-ribosylated. We describe here the synthesis of a complete set of triazole-isosteres of ADP-ribosylated histidine to serve as probes for ADP-ribosylating biomachinery. By exploiting Cu(I)- and Ru(II)-catalyzed click chemistry between a propargylglycine building block and an α- or ß-configured azidoribose, we have successfully assembled the α- and ß-configured 1,4- and 1,5-triazoles, mimicking N(τ)- and N(π)-ADP-ribosylated histidine, respectively. The ribosylated building blocks could be incorporated into a peptide sequence using standard solid-phase peptide synthesis and transformed on resin into the ADP-ribosylated fragments to provide a total of four ADP-ribosyl triazole conjugates, which were evaluated for their chemical and enzymatic stability. The 1,5-triazole analogues mimicking the N(π)-substituted histidines proved susceptible to base-induced epimerization and the ADP-ribosyl α-1,5-triazole linkage could be cleaved by the (ADP-ribosyl)hydrolase ARH3.
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Química Click , Histidina , Adenosina Difosfato Ribose , Catálise , TriazóisRESUMO
Acid ß-galactosidase (GLB1) and galactocerebrosidase (GALC) are retaining exo-ß-galactosidases involved in lysosomal glycoconjugate metabolism. Deficiency of GLB1 may result in the lysosomal storage disorders GM1 gangliosidosis, Morquio B syndrome, and galactosialidosis, and deficiency of GALC may result in Krabbe disease. Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) is a powerful technique to assess the activity of retaining glycosidases in relation to health and disease. This work describes the use of fluorescent and biotin-carrying activity-based probes (ABPs) to assess the activity of both GLB1 and GALC in cell lysates, culture media, and tissue extracts. The reported ABPs, which complement the growing list of retaining glycosidase ABPs based on configurational isomers of cyclophellitol, should assist in fundamental and clinical research on various ß-galactosidases, whose inherited deficiencies cause debilitating lysosomal storage disorders.