22 research outputs found

    Hepatitis C Virus Glycan-Dependent Interactions and the Potential for Novel Preventative Strategies

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    Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections continue to be a major contributor to liver disease worldwide. HCV treatment has become highly effective, yet there are still no vaccines or prophylactic strategies available to prevent infection and allow effective management of the global HCV burden. Glycan-dependent interactions are crucial to many aspects of the highly complex HCV entry process, and also modulate immune evasion. This review provides an overview of the roles of viral and cellular glycans in HCV infection and highlights glycan-focused advances in the development of entry inhibitors and vaccines to effectively prevent HCV infection

    Efficient Synthesis of Azido Sugars using Fluorosulfuryl Azide Diazotransfer Reagent

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    Azide-containing sugars are important tools for the synthesis of biologically relevant 1,2-cis-glycosides and for bioconjugation chemistry. Previous strategies for the installation of a non-participating C2-azido functionality use harsh conditions and long reaction times. Herein, we report the synthesis of azido sugars using fluorosulfuryl azide (FSO2N3; 1) with a Cu(II) catalyst as a safe and efficient diazotransfer reagent. Common hexosamine substrates were converted to 2-azido-2-deoxy sugars in less than 5 minutes in quantitative yield. Glycosyl donors with orthogonal protecting groups were readily prepared from these azido sugars with good overall yield and a single column purification. The diazotransfer protocol was also efficiently used on other amino sugar derivatives, including aminoglycosides and substrates with amine-containing linkers. This optimized method will expand access to important non-participating C2-azido protecting groups and other azido sugar derivatives

    Cell-Surface Glyco-Engineering by Exogenous Enzymatic Transfer Using a Bifunctional CMP-Neu5Ac Derivative

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    Cell-surface engineering strategies that permit long-lived display of well-defined, functionally active molecules are highly attractive for eliciting desired cellular responses and for understanding biological processes. Current methodologies for the exogenous introduction of synthetic biomolecules often result in short-lived presentations, or require genetic manipulation to facilitate membrane attachment. Herein, we report a cell-surface engineering strategy that is based on the use of a CMP-Neu5Ac derivative that is modified at C-5 by a bifunctional entity composed of a complex synthetic heparan sulfate (HS) oligosaccharide and biotin. It is shown that recombinant ST6GAL1 can readily transfer the modified sialic acid to N-glycans of glycoprotein acceptors of living cells resulting in long-lived display. The HS oligosaccharide is functionally active, can restore protein binding, and allows activation of cell signaling events of HS-deficient cells. The cell-surface engineering methodology can easily be adapted to any cell type and is highly amenable to a wide range of complex biomolecules

    Cell-Surface Glyco-Engineering by Exogenous Enzymatic Transfer Using a Bifunctional CMP-Neu5Ac Derivative

    No full text
    Cell-surface engineering strategies that permit long-lived display of well-defined, functionally active molecules are highly attractive for eliciting desired cellular responses and for understanding biological processes. Current methodologies for the exogenous introduction of synthetic biomolecules often result in short-lived presentations, or require genetic manipulation to facilitate membrane attachment. Herein, we report a cell-surface engineering strategy that is based on the use of a CMP-Neu5Ac derivative that is modified at C-5 by a bifunctional entity composed of a complex synthetic heparan sulfate (HS) oligosaccharide and biotin. It is shown that recombinant ST6GAL1 can readily transfer the modified sialic acid to N-glycans of glycoprotein acceptors of living cells resulting in long-lived display. The HS oligosaccharide is functionally active, can restore protein binding, and allows activation of cell signaling events of HS-deficient cells. The cell-surface engineering methodology can easily be adapted to any cell type and is highly amenable to a wide range of complex biomolecules

    Numerical methods for kinetic equations Book of abstracts

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    SIGLEAvailable from TIB Hannover: F97B2212+a / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman

    Synthesis of peptides and glycopeptides with polyproline II helical topology as potential antifreeze molecules

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    A library of peptides and glycopeptides containing (4R)-hydroxy-l-proline (Hyp) residues were designed with a view to providing stable polyproline II (PPII) helical molecules with antifreeze activity. A library of dodecapeptides containing contiguous Hyp residues or an Ala-Hyp-Ala tripeptide repeat sequence were synthesized with and without α-O-linked N-acetylgalactosamine and α-O-linked galactose-β-(1→3)-N-acetylgalactosamine appended to the peptide backbone. All (glyco)peptides possessed PPII helical secondary structure with some showing significant thermal stability. The majority of the (glyco)peptides did not exhibit thermal hysteresis (TH) activity and were not capable of modifying the morphology of ice crystals. However, an unglycosylated Ala-Hyp-Ala repeat peptide did show significant TH and ice crystal re-shaping activity suggesting that it was capable of binding to the surface of ice. All (glyco)peptides synthesized displayed some ice recrystallization inhibition (IRI) activity with unglycosylated peptides containing the Ala-Hyp-Ala motif exhibiting the most potent inhibitory activity. Interestingly, although glycosylation is critical to the activity of native antifreeze glycoproteins (AFGPs) that possess an Ala-Thr-Ala tripeptide repeat, this same structural modification is detrimental to the antifreeze activity of the Ala-Hyp-Ala repeat peptides studied here

    Synthesis of asymmetrical multiantennary human milk oligosaccharides

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    Despite mammalian glycans typically having highly complex asymmetrical multiantennary architectures, chemical and chemoenzymatic synthesis has almost exclusively focused on the preparation of simpler symmetrical structures. This deficiency hampers investigations into the biology of glycan-binding proteins, which in turn complicates the biomedical use of this class of biomolecules. Herein, we describe an enzymatic strategy, using a limited number of human glycosyltransferases, to access a collection of 60 asymmetric, multiantennary human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs), which were used to develop a glycan microarray. Probing the array with several glycan-binding proteins uncovered that not only terminal glycoepitopes but also complex architectures of glycans can influence binding selectivity in unanticipated manners. N- and O-linked glycans express structural elements of HMOs, and thus, the reported synthetic principles will find broad applicability

    Total synthesis of homogeneous antifreeze glycopeptides and glycoproteins

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    Don't freeze! A native chemical ligation-desulfurization strategy has been employed for the convergent synthesis of a library of defined antifreeze glycopeptides and glycoproteins (AFGPs) ranging in size from 1.2 to 19.5 kDa (see picture). These AFGPs possessed the secondary structure of a polyproline type II helix and exhibited significant ice recrystallization inhibition and thermal hysteresis activity.5 page(s
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