39 research outputs found

    The Nature of the O-2/O-5 Cooperative Effect and Its Role in Chemical Glycosylation

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    Since carbohydrates were first discovered, understanding the structure, reactivity, and function of these bioorganic compounds has remained of great priority. However, as the appreciation for the biological roles of carbohydrates intensifies, a growing demand for efficient and scalable methods towards the synthesis of these challenging molecules has become even more imperative. While modern synthetic techniques have allowed us to readily achieve most glycosidic linkages, it is the inability to effectively predict and control the stereoselectivity of the glycosylation reaction that has remained the synthetic hurdle. Herein, much effort has been placed in the investigation of “mixed-patterned” glycosyl donors as they have shown some interesting behaviors in glycosylation. Initial findings revealed that the behavior of these particular donors could be rationalized by a theory developed in our laboratory, entitled the “O-2/O-5 cooperative effect,” wherein the energetic consequences associated with particular protecting group patterns were analyzed. As a result, the work of this doctoral dissertation is centered upon the exploration of glycosyl donor protecting groups, and their effect on both the reactivity and stereoselectivity with which the glycosylation reaction proceeds

    Structure-based discovery of glycomimetic FmlH ligands as inhibitors of bacterial adhesion during urinary tract infection

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    Significance The emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria, including uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), makes the development of targeted antivirulence therapeutics a critical focus of research. During urinary tract infections (UTIs), UPEC uses chaperone–usher pathway pili tipped with an array of adhesins that recognize distinct receptors with sterochemical specificity to facilitate persistence in various tissues and habitats. We used an interdisciplinary approach driven by structural biology and synthetic glycoside chemistry to design and optimize glycomimetic inhibitors of the UPEC adhesin FmlH. These inhibitors competitively blocked FmlH in vitro, in in vivo mouse UTI models, and in ex vivo healthy human kidney tissue. This work demonstrates the utility of structure-driven drug design in the effort to develop antivirulence therapeutic compounds. </jats:p

    Photoaffinity labeling with cholesterol analogues precisely maps a cholesterol-binding site in voltage-dependent anion channel-1

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    Voltage-dependent anion channel-1 (VDAC1) is a highly regulated β-barrel membrane protein that mediates transport of ions and metabolites between the mitochondria and cytosol of the cell. VDAC1 co-purifies with cholesterol and is functionally regulated by cholesterol, among other endogenous lipids. Molecular modeling studies based on NMR observations have suggested five cholesterol-binding sites in VDAC1, but direct experimental evidence for these sites is lacking. Here, to determine the sites of cholesterol binding, we photolabeled purified mouse VDAC1 (mVDAC1) with photoactivatable cholesterol analogues and analyzed the photolabeled sites with both top-down mass spectrometry (MS), and bottom-up MS paired with a clickable, stable isotope-labeled tag, FLI-tag. Using cholesterol analogues with a diazirine in either the 7 position of the steroid ring (LKM38) or the aliphatic tail (KK174), we mapped a binding pocket in mVDAC1 localized to Thr83 and Glu73, respectively. When Glu73 was mutated to a glutamine, KK174 no longer photolabeled this residue, but instead labeled the nearby Tyr62 within this same binding pocket. The combination of analytical strategies employed in this work permits detailed molecular mapping of a cholesterol-binding site in a protein, including an orientation of the sterol within the site. Our work raises the interesting possibility that cholesterol-mediated regulation of VDAC1 may be facilitated through a specific binding site at the functionally important Glu73 residue

    Structural basis of Smoothened regulation by its extracellular domains.

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    Developmental signals of the Hedgehog (Hh) and Wnt families are transduced across the membrane by Frizzledclass G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) composed of both a heptahelical transmembrane domain (TMD) and an extracellular cysteine-rich domain (CRD). How the large extracellular domains of GPCRs regulate signalling by the TMD is unknown. We present crystal structures of the Hh signal transducer and oncoprotein Smoothened, a GPCR that contains two distinct ligand-binding sites: one in its TMD and one in the CRD. The CRD is stacked a top the TMD, separated by an intervening wedge-like linker domain. Structure-guided mutations show that the interface between the CRD, linker domain and TMD stabilizes the inactive state of Smoothened. Unexpectedly, we find a cholesterol molecule bound to Smoothened in the CRD binding site. Mutations predicted to prevent cholesterol binding impair the ability of Smoothened to transmit native Hh signals. Binding of a clinically used antagonist, vismodegib, to the TMD induces a conformational change that is propagated to the CRD, resulting in loss of cholesterol from the CRD-linker domain-TMD interface. Our results clarify the structural mechanism by which the activity of a GPCR is controlled by ligand-regulated interactions between its extracellular and transmembrane domains

    Mechanism of chemical O-glycosylation: from early studies to recent discoveries

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    Superarming the <i>S</i>-Benzoxazolyl Glycosyl Donors by Simple 2-<i>O</i>-Benzoyl-3,4,6-tri-<i>O</i>-benzyl Protection

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    The strategic placement of common protecting groups led to the discovery of a new method for “superarming” glycosyl donors. Conceptualized from our previous studies on the O-2/O-5 Cooperative Effect, it was determined that S-benzoxazolyl glycosyl donors possessing both a participating moiety at C-2 and an electronically armed lone pair at O-5, such as the superarmed glycosyl donor shown above, were exceptionally reactive

    Concise synthesis of 1,3-di-O-substituted tetrahydropyran derivatives as conformationally stable pyranose mimetics

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    A practical synthetic route to 1,3-di-O-substituted tetrahydropyrans has been developed. An important feature of these obtained glycomimetics is the bulky t-butyl functionality at the C-4 position, which imposes a chair conformation as the lowest energy conformer, making these compounds ideal pyranose mimetics. © 2010 Académie des sciences

    Application of the Superarmed Glycosyl Donor to Chemoselective Oligosaccharide Synthesis

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    Recently, we discovered a novel method for “superarming” glycosyl donors. Herein, this concept has been exemplified in one-pot oligosaccharide syntheses, whereby the superarmed glycosyl donor was chemoselectively activated over traditional “armed” and disarmed glycosyl acceptors. Direct side-by-side comparison of the reactivities of the classic armed and superarmed glycosyl donors further validates the credibility of the novel concept
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