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UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor

Sialic acids cap glycans displayed on mammalian glycoproteins and glycolipids and mediate many glycan-receptor interactions. Sialoglycans play a role in diseases such as cancer and infections where they facilitate immune evasion and metastasis or serve as cellular receptors for viruses, respectively...

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Autores principales: Moons, Sam J., Hornikx, Daniël L.A.H., Aasted, Mikkel K. M., Pijnenborg, Johan F.A., Calzari, Matteo, White, Paul B., Narimatsu, Yoshiki, Clausen, Henrik, Wandall, Hans H., Boltje, Thomas J., Büll, Christian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10320844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37415865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cb00006k
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author Moons, Sam J.
Hornikx, Daniël L.A.H.
Aasted, Mikkel K. M.
Pijnenborg, Johan F.A.
Calzari, Matteo
White, Paul B.
Narimatsu, Yoshiki
Clausen, Henrik
Wandall, Hans H.
Boltje, Thomas J.
Büll, Christian
author_facet Moons, Sam J.
Hornikx, Daniël L.A.H.
Aasted, Mikkel K. M.
Pijnenborg, Johan F.A.
Calzari, Matteo
White, Paul B.
Narimatsu, Yoshiki
Clausen, Henrik
Wandall, Hans H.
Boltje, Thomas J.
Büll, Christian
author_sort Moons, Sam J.
collection PubMed
description Sialic acids cap glycans displayed on mammalian glycoproteins and glycolipids and mediate many glycan-receptor interactions. Sialoglycans play a role in diseases such as cancer and infections where they facilitate immune evasion and metastasis or serve as cellular receptors for viruses, respectively. Strategies that specifically interfere with cellular sialoglycan biosynthesis, such as sialic acid mimetics that act as metabolic sialyltransferase inhibitors, enable research into the diverse biological functions of sialoglycans. Sialylation inhibitors are also emerging as potential therapeutics for cancer, infection, and other diseases. However, sialoglycans serve many important biological functions and systemic inhibition of sialoglycan biosynthesis can have adverse effects. To enable local and inducible inhibition of sialylation, we have synthesized and characterized a caged sialyltransferase inhibitor that can be selectively activated with UV-light. A photolabile protecting group was conjugated to a known sialyltransferase inhibitor (P-SiaFNEtoc). This yielded a photoactivatable inhibitor, UV-SiaFNEtoc, that remained inactive in human cell cultures and was readily activated through radiation with 365 nm UV light. Direct and short radiation of a human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cell monolayer was well-tolerated and resulted in photoactivation of the inhibitor and subsequent spatial restricted synthesis of asialoglycans. The developed photocaged sialic acid mimetic holds the potential to locally hinder the synthesis of sialoglycans through focused treatment with UV light and may be applied to bypass the adverse effects related to systemic loss of sialylation.
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spelling pubmed-103208442023-07-06 UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor Moons, Sam J. Hornikx, Daniël L.A.H. Aasted, Mikkel K. M. Pijnenborg, Johan F.A. Calzari, Matteo White, Paul B. Narimatsu, Yoshiki Clausen, Henrik Wandall, Hans H. Boltje, Thomas J. Büll, Christian RSC Chem Biol Chemistry Sialic acids cap glycans displayed on mammalian glycoproteins and glycolipids and mediate many glycan-receptor interactions. Sialoglycans play a role in diseases such as cancer and infections where they facilitate immune evasion and metastasis or serve as cellular receptors for viruses, respectively. Strategies that specifically interfere with cellular sialoglycan biosynthesis, such as sialic acid mimetics that act as metabolic sialyltransferase inhibitors, enable research into the diverse biological functions of sialoglycans. Sialylation inhibitors are also emerging as potential therapeutics for cancer, infection, and other diseases. However, sialoglycans serve many important biological functions and systemic inhibition of sialoglycan biosynthesis can have adverse effects. To enable local and inducible inhibition of sialylation, we have synthesized and characterized a caged sialyltransferase inhibitor that can be selectively activated with UV-light. A photolabile protecting group was conjugated to a known sialyltransferase inhibitor (P-SiaFNEtoc). This yielded a photoactivatable inhibitor, UV-SiaFNEtoc, that remained inactive in human cell cultures and was readily activated through radiation with 365 nm UV light. Direct and short radiation of a human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cell monolayer was well-tolerated and resulted in photoactivation of the inhibitor and subsequent spatial restricted synthesis of asialoglycans. The developed photocaged sialic acid mimetic holds the potential to locally hinder the synthesis of sialoglycans through focused treatment with UV light and may be applied to bypass the adverse effects related to systemic loss of sialylation. RSC 2023-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10320844/ /pubmed/37415865 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cb00006k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Moons, Sam J.
Hornikx, Daniël L.A.H.
Aasted, Mikkel K. M.
Pijnenborg, Johan F.A.
Calzari, Matteo
White, Paul B.
Narimatsu, Yoshiki
Clausen, Henrik
Wandall, Hans H.
Boltje, Thomas J.
Büll, Christian
UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
title UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
title_full UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
title_fullStr UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
title_full_unstemmed UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
title_short UV light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
title_sort uv light-induced spatial loss of sialic acid capping using a photoactivatable sialyltransferase inhibitor
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10320844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37415865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cb00006k
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