23 research outputs found
A mutational analysis of the globotriaosylceramide-binding sites of verotoxin VT1.
Escherichia coli verotoxin, also known as Shiga-like toxin, binds to eukaryotic cell membranes via the glycolipid Gb(3) receptors which present the P(k) trisaccharide Galalpha(1-4)Galbeta(1-4)Glcbeta. Crystallographic studies have identified three P(k) trisaccharide (P(k)-glycoside) binding sites per verotoxin 1B subunit (VT1B) monomer while NMR studies have identified binding of P(k)-glycoside only at site 2. To understand the basis for this difference, we studied binding of wild type VT1B and VT1B mutants, defective at one or more of the three sites, to P(k)-glycoside and pentavalent P(k) trisaccharide (pentaSTARFISH) in solution and Gb(3) presented on liposomal membranes using surface plasmon resonance. Site 2 was the key site in terms of free trisaccharide binding since mutants altered at sites 1 and 3 bound this ligand with wild type affinity. However, effective binding of the pentaSTARFISH molecule also required a functional site 3, suggesting that site 3 promotes pentavalent binding of linked trisaccharides at site 1 and site 2. Optimal binding to membrane-associated Gb(3) involved all three sites. Binding of all single site mutants to liposomal Gb(3) was weaker than wild type VT1B binding. Site 3 mutants behaved as if they had reduced ability to enter into high avidity interactions with Gb(3) in the membrane context. Double mutants at site 1/site 3 and site 2/site 3 were completely inactive in terms of binding to liposomal Gb(3,) even though the site 1/site 3 mutant bound trisaccharide with almost wild type affinity. Thus site 2 alone is not sufficient to confer high avidity binding to membrane-localized Gb(3). Cytotoxic activity paralleled membrane glycolipid binding. Our data show that the interaction of verotoxin with the Gb(3) trisaccharide is highly context dependent and that a membrane environment is required for biologically relevant studies of the interaction
Human Milk Oligosaccharide Specificities of Human Galectins. Comparison of Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry and Glycan Microarray Screening Results.
International audienceThe affinities of thirty-two free human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) for four human galectin proteins, a stable mutant of hGal1 (hGal-1), a C-terminal fragment of hGal-3 (hGal-3C), hGal-7, and an N-terminal fragment of hGal-9 (hGal-9N), were measured using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). The binding data show that each of the four galectins recognize the majority of the HMOs tested (hGal-1 binds thirty-two HMOs, hGal-3C binds twenty-six, hGal-7 binds thirty-one, and hGal-9N binds twenty-six). Twenty-five of the HMOs tested bind all four galectins, with affinities ranging from 10(3) to 10(5) M(-1). The reliability of the ESI-MS assay for quantifying the affinities of HMOs for lectins was established from the agreement found between the ESI-MS data and affinities of a small number of HMOs for hGal-1, hGal-3C, and hGal-7 measured by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Comparison of the relative affinities (of 14 HMOs) measured by ESI-MS with the reported specificities of hGal-1, hGal-3, hGal-7, and hGal-9 for these same HMOs established using the shotgun human milk glycan microarray (HM-SGM-v2) showed fair-to-poor correlation, with evidence of false positives and false negatives in the microarray data. The results of this study suggest that HMO specificities of lectins established using microarrays may not accurately reflect their true HMO-binding properties and that the use of "in solution" assays such as ESI-MS and ITC is to be preferred
N-Acetyllactosamine Conjugated to Gold Nanoparticles Inhibits Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli Colonization of the Epithelium in Human Intestinal Biopsy Specimens
We previously reported that the bundle-forming pilus-mediated localized adherence of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli to HEp-2, T84, and Caco-2 cells is inhibited by N-acetyllactosamine neoglycoconjugates. The results presented here extend this observation to the epithelium of biopsy specimens obtained from the human adult duodenum, terminal ileum, and colon
Rapid, Hydrolytically Stable Modification of Aldehyde-Terminated Proteins and Phage Libraries
We describe the rapid reaction of
2-amino benzamidoxime (ABAO)
derivatives with aldehydes in water. The ABAO combines an aniline
moiety for iminium-based activation of the aldehyde and a nucleophilic
group (Nu:) ortho to the amine for intramolecular ring closure. The
reaction between ABAO and aldehydes is kinetically similar to oxime
formations performed under stoichiometric aniline catalysis. We characterized
the reaction by both NMR and UV spectroscopy and determined that the
rate-determining step of the process is formation of a Schiff base,
which is followed by rapid intramolecular ring closure. The relationship
between apparent rate constant and pH suggests that a protonated benzamidoxime
acts as an internal general acid in Schiff-base formation. The reaction
is accelerated by substituents in the aromatic ring that increase
the basicity of the aromatic amine. The rate of up to 40 M<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> between an electron-rich aldehyde and 5-methoxy-ABAO
(PMA), which was observed at pH 4.5, places this reaction among the
fastest known bio-orthogonal reactions. Reaction between M13 phage-displayed
library of peptides terminated with an aldehyde moiety and 1 mM biotin-ABAO
derivative reaches completion in 1 h at pH 4.5. Finally, the product
of reaction, dihydroquinazoline derivative, shows fluorescence at
490 nm suggesting a possibility of developing fluorogenic aldehyde-reactive
probes based on ABAO framework
Silent Encoding of Chemical Post-Translational Modifications in Phage-Displayed Libraries
<i>In vitro</i> selection of chemically modified peptide
libraries presented on phage, while a powerful technology, is limited
to one chemical post-translational modification (cPTM) per library.
We use unique combinations of redundant codons to encode cPTMs with
“silent barcodes” to trace multiple modifications within
a mixed modified library. As a proof of concept, we produced phage-displayed
peptide libraries Ser-[X]<sub>4</sub>-Gly-Gly-Gly, with Gly and Ser
encoded using unique combinations of codons (TCA-[X]<sub>4</sub>-GGAGGAGGA,
AGT-[X]<sub>4</sub>-GGTGGTGGT, etc., where [X]<sub>4</sub> denotes
a random NNK library). After separate chemical modification and pooling,
mixed-modified libraries can be panned and deep-sequenced to identify
the enriched peptide sequence and the accompanying cPTM simultaneously.
We panned libraries bearing combinations of modifications (sulfonamide,
biotin, mannose) against matched targets (carbonic anhydrase, streptavidin,
concanavalin A) to identify desired ligands. Synthesis and validation
of sequences identified by deep sequencing revealed that specific
cPTMs are significantly enriched in panning against the specific targets.
Panning on carbonic anhydrase yielded a potent ligand, sulfonamide–WIVP,
with <i>K</i><sub>d</sub> = 6.7 ± 2.1 nM, a 20-fold
improvement compared with the control ligand sulfonamide–GGGG.
Silent encoding of multiple cPTMs can be readily incorporated into
other <i>in vitro</i> display technologies such as bacteriophage
T7 or mRNA display
Silent Encoding of Chemical Post-Translational Modifications in Phage-Displayed Libraries
<i>In vitro</i> selection of chemically modified peptide
libraries presented on phage, while a powerful technology, is limited
to one chemical post-translational modification (cPTM) per library.
We use unique combinations of redundant codons to encode cPTMs with
“silent barcodes” to trace multiple modifications within
a mixed modified library. As a proof of concept, we produced phage-displayed
peptide libraries Ser-[X]<sub>4</sub>-Gly-Gly-Gly, with Gly and Ser
encoded using unique combinations of codons (TCA-[X]<sub>4</sub>-GGAGGAGGA,
AGT-[X]<sub>4</sub>-GGTGGTGGT, etc., where [X]<sub>4</sub> denotes
a random NNK library). After separate chemical modification and pooling,
mixed-modified libraries can be panned and deep-sequenced to identify
the enriched peptide sequence and the accompanying cPTM simultaneously.
We panned libraries bearing combinations of modifications (sulfonamide,
biotin, mannose) against matched targets (carbonic anhydrase, streptavidin,
concanavalin A) to identify desired ligands. Synthesis and validation
of sequences identified by deep sequencing revealed that specific
cPTMs are significantly enriched in panning against the specific targets.
Panning on carbonic anhydrase yielded a potent ligand, sulfonamide–WIVP,
with <i>K</i><sub>d</sub> = 6.7 ± 2.1 nM, a 20-fold
improvement compared with the control ligand sulfonamide–GGGG.
Silent encoding of multiple cPTMs can be readily incorporated into
other <i>in vitro</i> display technologies such as bacteriophage
T7 or mRNA display