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7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins

[Image: see text] The maintenance of therapeutic glycoproteins within the circulatory system is associated, in large part, with the integrity of sialic acids as terminal sugars on the glycans. Glycoprotein desialylation, either by spontaneous cleavage or through host sialidases, leads to protein cle...

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Autores principales: Geissner, Andreas, Baumann, Lars, Morley, Thomas J., Wong, Andrew K. O., Sim, Lyann, Rich, Jamie R., So, Pauline P. L., Dullaghan, Edie M., Lessard, Etienne, Iqbal, Umar, Moreno, Maria, Wakarchuk, Warren W., Withers, Stephen G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7908025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33655072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.0c01589
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author Geissner, Andreas
Baumann, Lars
Morley, Thomas J.
Wong, Andrew K. O.
Sim, Lyann
Rich, Jamie R.
So, Pauline P. L.
Dullaghan, Edie M.
Lessard, Etienne
Iqbal, Umar
Moreno, Maria
Wakarchuk, Warren W.
Withers, Stephen G.
author_facet Geissner, Andreas
Baumann, Lars
Morley, Thomas J.
Wong, Andrew K. O.
Sim, Lyann
Rich, Jamie R.
So, Pauline P. L.
Dullaghan, Edie M.
Lessard, Etienne
Iqbal, Umar
Moreno, Maria
Wakarchuk, Warren W.
Withers, Stephen G.
author_sort Geissner, Andreas
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The maintenance of therapeutic glycoproteins within the circulatory system is associated, in large part, with the integrity of sialic acids as terminal sugars on the glycans. Glycoprotein desialylation, either by spontaneous cleavage or through host sialidases, leads to protein clearance, mainly through the liver. Thus, the installation of minimally modified sialic acids that are hydrolysis-resistant yet biologically equivalent should lead to increased circulatory half-lives and improved pharmacokinetic profiles. Here we describe the chemoenzymatic synthesis of CMP–sialic acid sugar donors bearing fluorine atoms at the 7-position, starting from the corresponding 4-deoxy-4-fluoro-N-acetylhexosamine precursors. For the derivative with natural stereochemistry we observe efficient glycosyl transfer by sialyltransferases, along with improved stability of the resultant 7-fluorosialosides toward spontaneous hydrolysis (3- to 5-fold) and toward cleavage by GH33 sialidases (40- to 250-fold). Taking advantage of the rapid transfer of 7-fluorosialic acid by sialyltransferases, we engineered the O-glycan of Interferon α-2b and the N-glycans of the therapeutic glycoprotein α1-antitrypsin. Studies of the uptake of the glyco-engineered α1-antitrypsin by HepG2 liver cells demonstrated the bioequivalence of 7-fluorosialic acid to sialic acid in suppressing interaction with liver cell lectins. In vivo pharmacokinetic studies reveal enhanced half-life of the protein decorated with 7-fluorosialic acid relative to unmodified sialic acid in the murine circulatory system. 7-Fluorosialylation therefore offers considerable promise as a means of prolonging circulatory half-lives of glycoproteins and may pave the way toward biobetters for therapeutic use.
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spelling pubmed-79080252021-03-01 7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins Geissner, Andreas Baumann, Lars Morley, Thomas J. Wong, Andrew K. O. Sim, Lyann Rich, Jamie R. So, Pauline P. L. Dullaghan, Edie M. Lessard, Etienne Iqbal, Umar Moreno, Maria Wakarchuk, Warren W. Withers, Stephen G. ACS Cent Sci [Image: see text] The maintenance of therapeutic glycoproteins within the circulatory system is associated, in large part, with the integrity of sialic acids as terminal sugars on the glycans. Glycoprotein desialylation, either by spontaneous cleavage or through host sialidases, leads to protein clearance, mainly through the liver. Thus, the installation of minimally modified sialic acids that are hydrolysis-resistant yet biologically equivalent should lead to increased circulatory half-lives and improved pharmacokinetic profiles. Here we describe the chemoenzymatic synthesis of CMP–sialic acid sugar donors bearing fluorine atoms at the 7-position, starting from the corresponding 4-deoxy-4-fluoro-N-acetylhexosamine precursors. For the derivative with natural stereochemistry we observe efficient glycosyl transfer by sialyltransferases, along with improved stability of the resultant 7-fluorosialosides toward spontaneous hydrolysis (3- to 5-fold) and toward cleavage by GH33 sialidases (40- to 250-fold). Taking advantage of the rapid transfer of 7-fluorosialic acid by sialyltransferases, we engineered the O-glycan of Interferon α-2b and the N-glycans of the therapeutic glycoprotein α1-antitrypsin. Studies of the uptake of the glyco-engineered α1-antitrypsin by HepG2 liver cells demonstrated the bioequivalence of 7-fluorosialic acid to sialic acid in suppressing interaction with liver cell lectins. In vivo pharmacokinetic studies reveal enhanced half-life of the protein decorated with 7-fluorosialic acid relative to unmodified sialic acid in the murine circulatory system. 7-Fluorosialylation therefore offers considerable promise as a means of prolonging circulatory half-lives of glycoproteins and may pave the way toward biobetters for therapeutic use. American Chemical Society 2021-01-19 2021-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7908025/ /pubmed/33655072 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.0c01589 Text en © 2021 American Chemical Society Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Geissner, Andreas
Baumann, Lars
Morley, Thomas J.
Wong, Andrew K. O.
Sim, Lyann
Rich, Jamie R.
So, Pauline P. L.
Dullaghan, Edie M.
Lessard, Etienne
Iqbal, Umar
Moreno, Maria
Wakarchuk, Warren W.
Withers, Stephen G.
7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins
title 7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins
title_full 7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins
title_fullStr 7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins
title_full_unstemmed 7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins
title_short 7-Fluorosialyl Glycosides Are Hydrolysis Resistant but Readily Assembled by Sialyltransferases Providing Easy Access to More Metabolically Stable Glycoproteins
title_sort 7-fluorosialyl glycosides are hydrolysis resistant but readily assembled by sialyltransferases providing easy access to more metabolically stable glycoproteins
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7908025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33655072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.0c01589
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