| Literature DB >> 33748433 |
Mia I Zol-Hanlon1,2, Benjamin Schumann1,2.
Abstract
Glycans are ubiquitous in biology, but their complex structure and biosynthesis have challenged research of their wide-ranging roles. Here, the authors comment on current trends on the role of chemical methodologies in the field of glycobiology.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33748433 PMCID: PMC7610353 DOI: 10.1038/s42004-020-00337-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Chem ISSN: 2399-3669
Fig. 1Synthesising and arraying carbohydrates.
a Multiple selectivities must be managed in the glycosylation reaction: regioselectivity between similarly nucleophilic hydroxyl groups (green), stereoselectivity at the anomeric centre (blue) and branch points influencing protecting group (PG) chemistry (orange) (LG: leaving group). b (1) Cyclic, automated glycan synthesis. The accessibility of glycans has been improved by the development of generalised solid and solution-phase syntheses, allowing for streamlined automation of successive reactions and minimisation of the number of steps. Key to this has been protecting group chemistry, including management of orthogonal protecting groups for branching, selection of highly stereoselective reactants and chemistry of the support-bound cleavable linker. (2) Chemoenzymatic glycan synthesis. Nature has evolved a huge array of GTs to add sugar moieties (most commonly using sugar nucleotides as donors, NDP: nucleotide diphosphate) with exquisite selectivity. Efforts to mine genomes for GTs that catalyse otherwise difficult steps have boosted yields and shortened syntheses of biologically relevant glycans. c High-throughput glycosylation condition scouting by an automated microfluidic platform for the systematic screening of multiple reaction variables. d The glycan microarray technique. Glycans, obtained from natural or synthetic sources, are conjugated to immobilisable groups at their reducing end, such as reactive functionalities or lipids. Thereby, glycans can be spotted on suitable matrices such as nitrocellulose or glass slides in femtomole amounts with an automated printer. Hundreds of glycan probes in parallel can then be screened for binding by proteins using washing and detection, similarly to an ELISA.
Fig. 2Metabolic oligosaccharide engineering and glycan sequencing.
a Bioorthogonal chemical probes for metabolic glycan tagging. (1) The ability of some GTs to accept non-natural substrates has allowed for the development of a range of clickable probes enabling enrichment, MS-glycoproteomics and imaging of glycoproteins. (2) A selection of bioorthogonal functionalities. While the copper catalyzed azide-alkyne 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition (CuAAC) and strain-promoted version (SPAAC) (first panel) are the classic examples, another major class involves the inverse electron demand Diels-Alder reaction between tetrazines and alkenes (second panel, TCO: trans-cyclooctene). b The “bump-and-hole” strategy for MOE. (1) Humans have approx. 20 isoenzymes of the N-acetylgalactosaminyl transferase enzyme family (GalNAc-T1 through T20) that initiate O-glycosylation, with hierarchical and compensatory function complicating their study. (2) Structure-based design of a bump-and-hole (“BH”) double mutant of a single GalNAc-T allows for installation of a gain-of-function MOE reporter system for that enzyme’s activity in cells. c A summary of technical advances related to glycan sequencing techniques in recent years. UHPLC: ultra-high performance liquid chromatography, HCD: higher-energy collisional dissociation, ETD: electron transfer dissociation.