1 research outputs found
ROMP-based Glycopolymers with High Affinity for Mannose-Binding Lectins
Well-defined, highly reactive poly(norbornenyl azlactone)s
of controlled
length (number-average degree of polymerization DPn̅ = 10 to 1,000) were made by ring-opening
metathesis polymerization (ROMP) of pure exo-norbornenyl
azlactone. These were converted into glycopolymers using a facile
postpolymerization modification (PPM) strategy based on click aminolysis
of azlactone side groups by amino-functionalized glycosides. Pegylated
mannoside, heptyl-mannoside, and pegylated glucoside were used in
the PPM. Binding inhibition of the resulting glycopolymers was evaluated
against a lectin panel (Bc2L-A, FimH, langerin, DC-SIGN, ConA). Inhibition
profiles depended on the sugars and the degrees of polymerization.
Glycopolymers from pegylated-mannoside-functionalized polynorbornene,
with DPn̅ = 100, showed strong binding inhibition,
with subnanomolar range inhibitory concentrations (IC50s). Polymers surpassed the inhibitory potential of their monovalent
analogues by four to five orders of magnitude thanks to a multivalent
(synergistic) effect. Sugar-functionalized poly(norbornenyl azlactone)s
are therefore promising tools to study multivalent carbohydrate–lectin
interactions and for applications against lectin-promoted bacterial/viral
binding to host cells