| Literature DB >> 33878235 |
Sybrin P Schröder1, Wendy A Offen2, Alexandra Males2, Yi Jin2, Casper de Boer1, Jacopo Enotarpi1, Laura Marino1, Gijsbert A van der Marel1, Bogdan I Florea1, Jeroen D C Codée1, Herman S Overkleeft1, Gideon J Davies2.
Abstract
There is a vast genomic resource for enzymes active on carbohydrates. Lagging far behind, however, are functional chemical tools for the rapid characterization of carbohydrate-active enzymes. Activity-based probes (ABPs) offer one chemical solution to these issues with ABPs based upon cyclophellitol epoxide and aziridine covalent and irreversible inhibitors representing a potent and widespread approach. Such inhibitors for enzymes active on polysaccharides are potentially limited by the requirement for several glycosidic bonds, themselves substrates for the enzyme targets. Here, it is shown that non-hydrolysable trisaccharide can be synthesized and applied even to enzymes with challenging subsite requirements. It was found that incorporation of carbasugar moieties, which was accomplished by cuprate-assisted regioselective trans-diaxial epoxide opening of carba-mannal synthesised for this purpose, yields inactivators that act as powerful activity-based inhibitors for α-1,6 endo-mannanases. 3-D structures at 1.35-1.47 Å resolutions confirm the design rationale and binding to the enzymatic nucleophile. Carbasugar oligosaccharide cyclophellitols offer a powerful new approach for the design of robust endoglycosidase inhibitors, while the synthesis procedures presented here should allow adaptation towards activity-based endoglycosidase probes as well as configurational isosteres targeting other endoglycosidase families.Entities:
Keywords: Carbasugar; cyclophellitol; endoglycosidase; mechanism-based inhibitor; polysaccharides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33878235 PMCID: PMC8362039 DOI: 10.1002/chem.202101255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236
Figure 11,6‐epi‐manno‐cyclophellitol di‐ and trisaccharides subject of the here‐presented studies. A (in disaccharide 1) denotes a possible exoglycosidase cleavage site. B (in trisaccharide 2) denotes a possible endoglycosidase cleavage site, which is stabilised in 3.
Scheme 1Reagents and conditions: (a) i) TIPS−Cl, imidazole, DMF, quant.; ii) Li, naphthalene, THF, −78 to −20 °C; (b) i) m‐CPBA, DCM, −20 °C to rt, 93 % over two steps; ii) BnBr, NaH, TBAI, THF, 0 °C to rt, 75 %; (c) acceptor 7 (2 equiv.), Cu(OTf)2, toluene, 40 °C, 66 %; (d) i) BzCl, pyridine, N‐methylimidazole, DCM; ii) TBAF, THF, 70 % over two steps; (e) donor 10, TMSOTf, DCM, −30 °C, 1 h, 96 %; (f) i) 1,1,1‐trifluoroacetone, oxone, NaHCO3, EDTA, H2O, MeCN, EtOAc, 0 °C, 75 %; ii) NaOMe, MeOH, DCM, 83 %; iii) Pd(OH)2/C, H2, MeOH, dioxane, H2O, 85 %.
Details of BcGH76 complexes with 6‐epi‐manno‐cyclophellitol di‐ and trisaccharides 1–3. Full details in Table S1.
|
|
D125 N ( |
D125 N ( |
WT[a] ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Resolution |
1.40 Å |
1.47 Å |
1.35 Å |
|
PDB Code |
6ZBW |
6ZBM |
6ZBX |
[a] WT and D125 N crystals refer to an R341Q variant (with WT active site residues) and D125 N/R341Q respectively.
Figure 2Fo−Fc “omit” electron density for the 6‐epi‐manno‐cyclophellitol “trisaccharide” 2 and 3 bound to BcGH76. (a) 2 bound to D125 N variant, (b) 3 bound to 125 N (c) carbacycle‐containing “trisaccharide” 3 bound to the WT enzyme. Contour levels are 3 r.m.s.d. (0.46, 0.52, and 0.45 e− Å−3, respectively).
Figure 3Interactions of the carbacycle (blue) within the 6‐epi‐manno‐cyclophellitol “trisaccharide” 3 with WT BcGH76.
Percentage of reacted mannanases with the respective probes after 16 or 22 h of incubation. Both wild‐type and non‐catalytic mutant (R341Q) are fully transformed into the covalent enzyme‐inhibitor adduct with stabilised trisaccharide 3, but not with inhibitors 1 and 2.
|
Protein |
16 h incubation |
22 h incubation | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Wild Type |
25 |
30 |
100 |
30 |
30 |
100 |
|
D125 N |
0 |
75 |
40 |
0 |
85 |
44 |
|
R341Q |
25 |
17 |
100 |
30 |
17 |
100 |
|
D125 N/R341Q |
0 |
75 |
40 |
0 |
85 |
45 |