14 research outputs found
Monitoring glycosidase activity for clustered sugar substrates, a study on ÎČ-glucuronidase
International audienceDetermination of glycosidase hydrolysis kinetics for a monovalent sugar substrate is relatively straightforward and classically achieved by monitoring the fluorescence signal released from the sugar-conjugated probe after enzymatic hydrolysis. Naturally occuring sugar epitopes are, however, often clustered on biopolymers or at biological surfaces, and previous reports have shown that glycosidase hydrolytic rates can differ greatly with multivalent presentation of the sugar epitopes. New probes are needed to make it easier to interpret the importance of substrate clustering towards a specific enzyme activity. In this work, we developed multivalent glucuronide substrates attached to fluorescent amino-coumarines through self-immolative linkers to enable real time-monitoring of the hydrolysing activity of E.coli b-glucuronidases (GUS) towards clustered substrates. GUS are exoglycosidases of considerable therapeutic interest cleaving b-D-glucuronides and are found in the lysosomes, in the tumoral microenvironment, and are expressed by gut microbiota. GUS showed a much lower catalytic efficiency in hydrolysing clustered glucuronides due to a significantly lower enzymatic velocity and affinity for the substrates. GUS was 52-fold less efficient in hydrolysing GlcA substrates presented on an octameric silsequioxane (COSS) compared with a monovalent GlcA of similar chemical structure. Thus, kinetic and thermodynamic data of GUS hydrolysis towards multivalent glucuronides were easily obtained with these new types of enzymatically-triggered probes. More generally, adapting the substrate nature and valency of these new probes, should improve understanding of the impact of multivalency for a specific enzyme
Magnetic Nanoparticles Coated with Thiomannosides or Iminosugars to Switch and Recycle Galactosidase Activity
International audienc
Multivalent Fucosides with Nanomolar Affinity for the Aspergillus fumigatus Lectin FleA Prevent Spore Adhesion to Pneumocytes
FleA (or AFL), a fucose lectin, was recently identified in the opportunistic mold Aspergillus fumigatus, which causes fatal lung infections in immunocompromised patients. We designed di-, hexa- and octavalent fucosides with various spacer arm lengths to block the hexameric FleA through chelation. Microcalorimetry measurements showed that the ethylene glycol (EG) spacer arm length has a strong influence on the binding affinity of the divalent fucosides. The relationship between the EG length and chelate binding efficiency to FleA was explored according to polymer theory. Hexa- and octavalent compounds based on cyclodextrin and octameric silsesquioxane scaffolds were nanomolar FleA inhibitors, surpassing their monovalent fucose analogue by more than three orders of magnitude. Importantly, some of the fucosides were highly efficient in preventing fungal spore adhesion to bronchoepithelial cells, with half maximal inhibitory concentration values in the micromolar range. We propose that the synergistic antiadhesive effect observed can be ascribed to chelate binding to FleA and to the formation of conidium aggregates, as observed by optical microscopy. These fucosides are promising tools that can be used to better understand the role of FleA in conidia pathogenicity and host defenses against invasive aspergillosis
Evaluation of monovalent and multivalent iminosugars to modulate Candida albicans ÎČ-1,2-mannosyltransferase activities.
International audienceÎČ-1,2-Linked oligomannosides substitute the cell wall of numerous yeast species. Several of those including Candida albicans may cause severe infections associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality, especially in immunocompromised patients. ÎČ-1,2-Mannosides are known to be involved in the pathogenic process and to elicit an immune response from the host. In C.âalbicans, the synthesis of ÎČ-mannosides is under the control of a family of nine genes coding for putative ÎČ-mannosyltransferases. Two of them, CaBmt1 and CaBmt3, have been shown to initiate and prime the elongation of the ÎČ-mannosides on the cell-wall mannan core. In the present study, we have assessed the modulating activities of monovalent and multivalent iminosugar analogs on these enzymes in order to control the enzymatic bio-synthesis of ÎČ-mannosides. We have identified a monovalent deoxynojirimycin (DNJ) derivative that inhibits the CaBmt1-catalyzed initiating activity, and mono-, tetra- and polyvalent deoxymannojirimycin (DMJ) that modulate the CaBmt1 activity toward the formation of a single major product. Analysis of the aggregating properties of the multivalent iminosugars showed their ability to elicit clusterization of both CaBmt1 and CaBmt3, without affecting their activity. These results suggest promising roles for multivalent iminosugars as controlling agents for the biosynthesis of ÎČ-1,2 mannosides and for monovalent DNJ derivative as a first target for the design of future ÎČ-mannosyltransferase inhibitors
Di- and heptavalent nicotinic analogues to interfere with alpha 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
International audienceIn the field of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), recognized as important therapeutic targets, much effort has been dedicated to the development of nicotinic analogues to agonize or antagonize distinct homo-and heteropentamers nAChR subtypes, selectively. In this work we developed di- and heptavalent nicotinic derivatives based on ethylene glycol (EG) and cyclodextrin cores, respectively. The compounds showed a concentration dependent inhibition of acetylcholine-induced currents on alpha 7 nAChR expressed by Xenopus oocytes. Interesting features were observed with the divalent nicotinic derivatives, acting as antagonists with varied inhibitory concentrations (IC50) in function of the spacer arm length. The best divalent compounds showed a 16-fold lowered IC50 compared to the monovalent reference (12 vs 195 mu M). Docking investigations provide guidelines to rationalize these experimental findings
Correction to "topological effects and binding modes operating with multivalent iminosugar-based glycoclusters and mannosidases".
International audienc
[Abdullah Cevdet'e ait karikatĂŒrler]
Taha Toros ArĆivi, Dosya No: 10-Abdullah Cevde
Multivalent Inhibition of the Aspergillus fumigatus KDNase
Aspergillus fumigatus is a saprophytic fungus and opportunistic pathogen often causing fatal infections in immunocompromised patients. Recently AfKDNAse, an exoglycosidase hydrolyzing 2-keto-3-deoxynononic acid (KDN), a rare sugar from the sialic acid familly, was identified and characterized. The principal function of AfKDNAse is still unclear, but a study suggest a critical role in fungal cell wall morphology and virulence. Potent AfKDNAse inhibitors are required to better probe the enzymeâs biological role and as potential antivirulence factors. In this work, we developed a set of AfKDNAse inhibitors based on enzymatically stable thio-KDN motifs. C2, C9-linked heterodi-KDN were designed to fit into unusually close KDN sugar binding pockets in the protein. A polymeric compound with an average of 54 KDN motifs was also designed by click chemistry. Inhibitory assays performed on recombinant AfKDNAse showed a moderate and strong enzymatic inhibition for the two classes of compounds, respectively. The Poly-KDN showed more than a nine hundred fold improved inhibitory activity (IC50 = 1.52 ± 0.37”M, 17-fold in a KDN molar basis) compared to a monovalent KDN reference, and is to our knowledge, the best synthetic inhibitor described for a KDNase. Multivalency appears to be a relevant strategy for the design of potent KDNase inhibitors. Importantly, poly-KDN was shown to strongly decrease filamentation when co-cultured with A. fumigatus at micromolar concentrations, opening interesting perspectives in the development of antivirulence factors
Polymeric Iminosugars Improve the Activity of Carbohydrate-Processing Enzymes
Multivalent
iminosugars have recently emerged as powerful tools
to inhibit the activities of specific glycosidases. In this work,
biocompatible dextrans were coated with iminosugars to form linear
and ramified polymers with unprecedently high valencies (from 20 to
900) to probe the evolution of the multivalent inhibition as a function
of ligand valency. This study led to the discovery that polyvalent
iminosugars can also significantly enhance, not only inhibit, the
enzymatic activity of specific glycoside-hydrolase, as observed on
two galactosidases, a fucosidase, and a bacterial mannoside phosphorylase
for which an impressive 70-fold activation was even reached. The concept
of glycosidase activation is largely unexplored, with a unique recent
example of small-molecules activators of a bacterial O-GlcNAc hydrolase.
The possibility of using these polymers as âartificial enzyme
effectorsâ may therefore open up new perspectives in therapeutics
and biocatalysis