Coupling of carbohydrate antigens to protein carriers is a typical approach to enhancing the immunogenicity of carbohydrate-based vaccines. Glycoconjugates with well-defined structures are needed for studies defining the structural variables that govern antibody responses. We report a chemical strategy for preparation of an array of glycoconjugates containing saccharides of desired molecular sizes by selective depolymerization of bacterial polysaccharides and chemically controlled site-specific coupling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe binding of nineteen analogues of the upstream, terminal, monosaccharide residue of each of the O-polysaccharide (O-PS) of Vibrio cholerae O:1, serotype Ogawa and Inaba, with two murine monoclonal IgG antibodies both specific for the Ogawa LPS were measured using fluorescence spectroscopy. The use of the deoxy and the deoxyfluoro analogs allowed further refinement of the hydrogen-bonding pattern involved in the binding. Based on the binding characteristics observed for some of the ligands in the Inaba series, the binding of the monosaccharide that represents the upstream, terminal unit of the O-PS of V.
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