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ABSTRACT: Understanding the specificity of cell-surface carbohydrates interaction with antibodies and receptors is important for the development of new therapeutics and high-sensitivity diagnostics. This approach is, however, limited to the availability of natural and truncated sequences of the oligosaccharides and the sensitivity of the assay system. Reported here is the synthesis of the cancer antigen Globo H hexasaccharide, an epitope found on the cell surface of breast, prostate, and ovarian cancers, and its truncated sequences by using the programmable one-pot synthesis strategy. The saccharides were then arrayed covalently on glass slides with different density and used for the fluorencense-based binding analysis of two monoclonal antibodies against Globo H and the serum from breast cancer patients, to define the specificity of these antibodies. It was shown that the terminal tetrasaccharide binds the monoclonal antibodies equally well as does the hexasaccharide and the fucose residue is required for effective binding. The serum binds both the defucosylated pentasaccharide and the fucosylated hexasaccharide without a significant difference, perhaps because of the polyclonal nature of the serum or the presence of diverse immune responses to different sugar epitopes at various stages. This method requires very small amounts of materials and is more effective and sensitive than the traditional ELISA method, and thus provides another platform to monitor the immune response to carbohydrate epitopes at different stages during differentiation, metastasis, or treatment.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 02/2006; 103(1):15-20. · 9.68 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Human antibody 2G12 neutralizes a broad range of HIV-1 isolates. Hence, molecular characterization of its epitope, which corresponds to a conserved cluster of oligomannoses on the viral envelope glycoprotein gp120, is a high priority in HIV vaccine design. A prior crystal structure of 2G12 in complex with Man(9)GlcNAc(2) highlighted the central importance of the D1 arm in antibody binding. To characterize the specificity of 2G12 more precisely, we performed solution-phase ELISA, carbohydrate microarray analysis, and cocrystallized Fab 2G12 with four different oligomannose derivatives (Man(4), Man(5), Man(7), and Man(8)) that compete with gp120 for binding to 2G12. Our combined studies reveal that 2G12 is capable of binding both the D1 and D3 arms of the Man(9)GlcNAc(2) moiety, which would provide more flexibility to make the required multivalent interactions between the antibody and the gp120 oligomannose cluster than thought previously. These results have important consequences for the design of immunogens to elicit 2G12-like neutralizing antibodies as a component of an HIV vaccine.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 10/2005; 102(38):13372-7. · 9.68 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Tremendous efforts have been invested in the synthesis of purine libraries due to their importance in targeting various enzymes involved in different diseases and cellular processes. The synthesis of N9-alkylated purine scaffolds relied mostly on Mitsunobu conditions with a variety of alcohols or strong basic conditions with different organic halides. A more reliable and efficient way for the synthesis of N(9)-alkylated purine scaffolds is reported. This method uses tetrabutylammonium fluoride (TBAF) to assist such chemistry. In many cases, the reactions were completed within 10 min and gave the desired product in high yield and selectivity. Moreover, these mild reaction conditions permitted its use in combinatorial reactions in microtiter plates followed by in situ screening for the discovery of potent sulfotransferase inhibitors.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry 09/2005; 13(15):4622-6. · 2.92 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Sulfatases, which cleave sulfate esters in biological systems, play a key role in regulating the sulfation states that determine the function of many physiological molecules. Sulfatase substrates range from small cytosolic steroids, such as estrogen sulfate, to complex cell-surface carbohydrates, such as the glycosaminoglycans. The transformation of these molecules has been linked with important cellular functions, including hormone regulation, cellular degradation, and modulation of signaling pathways. Sulfatases have also been implicated in the onset of various pathophysiological conditions, including hormone-dependent cancers, lysosomal storage disorders, developmental abnormalities, and bacterial pathogenesis. These findings have increased interest in sulfatases and in targeting them for therapeutic endeavors. Although numerous sulfatases have been identified, the wide scope of their biological activity is only beginning to emerge. Herein, accounts of the diversity and growing biological relevance of sulfatases are provided along with an overview of the current understanding of sulfatase structure, mechanism, and inhibition.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 12/2004; 43(43):5736-63. · 13.45 Impact Factor
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Angewandte Chemie 10/2004; 116(43):5858 - 5886.
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ABSTRACT: The sulfonation (also known as sulfurylation) of biomolecules has long been known to take place in a variety of organisms, from prokaryotes to multicellular species, and new biological functions continue to be uncovered in connection with this important transformation. Early studies of sulfotransferases (STs), the enzymes that catalyze sulfonation, focused primarily on the cytosolic STs, which are involved in detoxification, hormone regulation, and drug metabolism. Although known to exist, the membrane-associated STs were not studied as extensively until more recently. Involved in the sulfonation of complex carbohydrates and proteins, they have emerged as central players in a number of molecular-recognition events and biochemical signaling pathways. STs have also been implicated in many pathophysiological processes. As a result, much interest in the complex roles of STs and in their targeting for therapeutic intervention has been generated. Progress in the elucidation of the structures and mechanisms of sulfotransferases, as well as their biological activity, inhibition, and synthetic utility, are discussed in this Review.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 08/2004; 43(27):3526-48. · 13.45 Impact Factor
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Marian C Bryan,
Fabio Fazio,
Hing-Ken Lee,
Cheng-Yuan Huang,
Aileen Chang, Michael D Best,
Daniel A Calarese,
Ola Blixt,
James C Paulson,
Dennis Burton,
Ian A Wilson,
Chi-Huey Wong
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ABSTRACT: A covalent array for the display of complex oligosaccharides in microtiter plates has been developed. This strategy is conducive to the display of carbohydrates to proteins of interest such as lectins and antibodies, including the broadly neutralizing antibody 2G12 against HIV envelope oligomannose and can be cleaved from the surface for further characterization by mass spectrometry. The system was used to probe the multivalent interaction of 2G12 with an optimal epitope (Kd 0.1 muM).
Journal of the American Chemical Society 08/2004; 126(28):8640-1. · 9.91 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Rapid diversity-oriented microplate library synthesis and in situ screening with a high-throughput fluorescence-based assay were used to develop potent inhibitors of beta-arylsulfotransferase IV (beta-AST-IV). This strategy leads to facile inhibitor synthesis and study as it allows protecting-group manipulation and product isolation from other library components to be avoided. Through repeated library formation, three aspects of inhibitor makeup, the identities of the two binding groups and the length of the linker between them, were independently optimized. Several potent inhibitors were obtained, one of which was determined to have an inhibition constant K(i) of 5 nM. This compound is the most potent beta-AST-IV inhibitor developed to date, with a K(i) value more than five orders of magnitude lower than the Michaelis constant K(m) for the substrate whose binding it inhibits.
ChemBioChem 07/2004; 5(6):811-9. · 3.94 Impact Factor