| Literature DB >> 30542567 |
Weizhun Yang1, Sherif Ramadan1,2, Jared Orwenyo3, Tayeb Kakeshpour1, Thomas Diaz1, Yigitcan Eken1, Miloslav Sanda4, James E Jackson1, Angela K Wilson1, Xuefei Huang1,5,6.
Abstract
N-Linked glycopeptides have highly diverse structures in nature. Herein, we describe the first synthesis of rare multi-antennary N-glycan bearing glycan chains on 6-OH of both α1,6- and α1,3-linked mannose arms. To expedite divergent generation of N-glycan structures, four orthogonal protective groups were installed at the branching points on the core tetrasaccharide, which could be removed individually without affecting one another. In addition, the synthetic route is flexible, allowing a bisecting glucosamine moiety to be introduced at a late stage of the synthesis, further expanding the diversity of sequences that could be achieved. The bisecting glucosamine unit significantly reduced the glycosylation yields of adjacent mannoses, which was attributed to steric hindrance imposed by the glucosamine based on molecular modelling analysis. The N-glycans were then transformed to oxazoline donors and ligated with a glycopeptide acceptor from haptoglobin promoted by the wild type Arthrobacter endo-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase (Endo-A). Endo-A exhibited interesting substrate preferences depending on donor sizes, which was rationalized through molecular dynamics studies. This is the first time that a glycopeptide bearing a bisecting N-acetyl glucosamine (GlcNAc), the rare N-glycan branch, and two LewisX trisaccharide antennae was synthesized, enabling access to this class of complex glycopeptide structures.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30542567 PMCID: PMC6240809 DOI: 10.1039/c8sc02457j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1General structure of N-linked glycan.
Scheme 1Synthesis of tetrasaccharide 1 bearing different protective groups at the four strategic branching points.
Scheme 2Synthesis of tetrasaccharide 13.
Successful introduction of a bisecting glucosamine to tetrasaccharide 15
|
| |||
| Entry | Donor amount | Promoter | Yield |
| 1 | 2.0 equiv. | NIS/TfOH | 37% |
| 2 | 3.0 equiv. | NIS/TfOH | 53% |
| 3 | 1.5 equiv. |
| 44% |
| 4 | 2.2 equiv. |
| 67% |
| 5 | 3.0 equiv. |
| 81% |
Scheme 3The four temporary protective groups on key pentasaccharide 15 could be orthogonally removed without affecting one another.
Scheme 4Glycans can be installed at the strategic branching points after orthogonal deprotections.
Fig. 2Representative conformations of (a) compound 17 and (b) compound 20 based on MD simulations. The red atom circled by the green circle is the free 2-OH of the non-reducing end mannose. In compound 17, the 2-OH group is pointing towards the bisecting glucosamine moiety potentially hindering its approach towards the activated donor for productive glycosylation. In comparison, the 2-OH in compound 20 is much less hindered, presumably resulting in higher nucleophilicity. The rest of atoms displayed with the ball and stick model are the bisecting glucosamine (compound 17) and the 4-OAc (compound 20) respectively.
Scheme 5Orthogonal deprotection and glycosylation for the synthesis of complex N-glycans 31–34.
Scheme 6Synthesis of 13C-labeled deprotected N-glycans 35–38.
Scheme 7Synthesis of glycopeptides 45 and 46via Endo-A promoted transglycosylations.
Binding energies of binding poses of 39 and 41 with Endo-A derived from MD simulations
| Compound | Binding pose | Binding energy (kcal mol–1) |
|
| 1 | –72.97 ± 6.04 |
| 2 | –94.00 ± 9.15 | |
| 3 | –77.36 ± 7.96 | |
| Average | –81.44 ± 11.10 | |
|
| 1 | –52.08 ± 11.26 |
| 2 | –60.17 ± 11.56 | |
| 3 | –55.26 ± 7.95 | |
| 4 | –58.80 ± 7.83 | |
| 5 | –54.86 ± 11.17 | |
| Average | –56.24 ± 9.95 | |
Fig. 3Representation binding pose of (a) N-glycan oxazoline 39 and Endo-A, and (b) 41 with Endo-A. Critical pocket residues are indicated. The indole rings of W216 and W244 are highlighted in magenta. In (a), the two indoles are perpendicular to each other, while in (b), they remain close to parallel. The glycan structures are shown in stick models (green color: carbon; red color: oxygen; blue color: nitrogen). A galactosyl unit (shown in space filling model) at the non-reducing end of 41 is located in between the two indole rings of W216 and W244, which presumably prevents the indoles to become perpendicular to each other.