Chemokines are proteins important for a range of biological processes from cell-directed migration (chemotaxis) to cell activation and differentiation. Chemokine C-C ligand 5 (CCL5) is an important pro-inflammatory chemokine attracting immune cells towards inflammatory sites through interaction with its receptors CCR1/3/5. Recombinant production of large quantities of CCL5 in Escherichia coli is challenging due to formation of inclusion bodies which necessitates refolding, often leading to low recovery of biologically active protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudaminic acid is a non-mammalian sugar found in the surface glycoconjugates of many bacteria, including several human pathogens, and is a virulence factor thought to facilitate immune evasion. The final step in the biosynthesis of the nucleotide activated form of the sugar, CMP-Pse5Ac7Ac is performed by a CMP-Pse5Ac7Ac synthetase (PseF). Here we present the biochemical and structural characterization of PseF from Aeromonas caviae (AcPseF), with AcPseF displaying metal-dependent activity over a broad pH and temperature range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlycans play a major role in biological cell-cell recognition and signal transduction but have found limited application in biosensors due to glycan/lectin promiscuity; multiple proteins are capable of binding to the same native glycan. Here, site-specific fluorination is used to introduce protein-glycan selectivity, and this is coupled with an electrochemical detection method to generate a novel biosensor platform. 3F-lacto--biose glycofluoroform is installed onto polymer tethers, which are subsequently immobilised onto gold screen printed electrodes, providing a non-fouling surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColicins are antimicrobial proteins produced by certain strains of that function as offensive weapons against closely-related competitor strains. Their bactericidal properties and narrow bacterial targeting range has made them of therapeutic interest. Furthermore, the applications of engineered non-bactericidal colicins are of interest as a cell surface-directed protein anchor for decorating with biomolecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlycan-mediated interactions play a crucial role in biology and medicine, influencing signalling, immune responses, and disease pathogenesis. However, the use of glycans in biosensing and diagnostics is limited by cross-reactivity, as certain glycan motifs can be recognised by multiple biologically distinct protein receptors. To address this specificity challenge, we report the enzymatic synthesis of a 150-member library of site-specifically fluorinated Lewis analogues ('glycofluoroforms') using naturally occurring enzymes and fluorinated monosaccharides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProstate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK with over 50 000 new cases diagnosed each year and although therapeutic advances in surgery, anti-androgens, radio- and chemotherapy have increased survival rates, there still remains a need for new treatments to combat the most aggressive forms of the disease. Gene therapy offers promise as an alternative approach but is reliant on selective targeting to the cancer cell surface. Herein we describe the novel construction of a prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) binding bioconjugate-polyplex, based on a glutamate-urea peptide scaffold using 'click' chemistry, which we demonstrate is capable of targeted delivery of a GFP gene to PSMA overexpressing prostate cancer cells, and therefore may have potential future application as part of a prostate cancer gene delivery therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiofilm formation is integral to the pathogenesis of numerous adherent bacteria and contributes to antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The rising threat of AMR means the need to develop novel nonbactericidal antiadhesion approaches against such bacteria is more urgent than ever. Both adherent-invasive (AIEC, implicated in inflammatory bowel disease) and uropathogenic (UPEC, responsible for ∼80% of urinary tract infections) adhere to terminal mannose sugars on epithelial glycoproteins through the FimH adhesin on their type 1 pilus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The severe acute respiratory syndrome Coronarovirus-2 associated still causes a significant number of deaths and hospitalizations mainly by the development of respiratory failure. We aim to validate lung ultrasound score in order to predict mortality and the severity of the clinical course related to the need of respiratory support.
Methods: In this prospective multicenter hospital-based cohort study, all adult patients with diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 infection, performed by real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction were included.
Despite an array of hypothesised implications for health, disease, and therapeutic development, antibodies against the non-human sialic acid -glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc) remain a subject of much debate. This systematic review of 114 publications aimed to generate a comprehensive overview of published studies in this field, addressing both the reported prevalence of anti-Neu5Gc antibodies in the human population and whether experimental variation accounts for the conflicting reports about the extent of this response. Absolute titres of anti-Neu5Gc antibodies, the reported prevalence of these antibodies, and the individual variation observed within experiments were analysed and grouped according to biological context ('inflammation', 'xenotransplantation', 'biotherapeutic use', 'cancer', and 'healthy populations'), detection method, target epitope selection, and choice of blocking agent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew methods are described that expand the scope of the Successive Ring Expansion (SuRE) with respect to synthetically challenging lactams. A protocol has been developed for use with 'unreactive' lactams, enabling SuRE reactions to be performed on subsrates that fail under previously established conditions. Ring expansion is also demonstarted on 'reactive' lactams derived from iminosugars for the first time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganic synthesis provides an accessible route to preparative scale biological glycans, although schemes to access these complex structures are often complicated by preparation of multiple monosaccharide building blocks. Bimodal glycosyl donors capable of forming both α- and β-anomers selectively, are an emerging tactic to reduce the required number of individual synthetic components in glycan construction. This review discusses examples of bimodal donors in the literature, and how they achieve their stereocontrol for both anomers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDue to the variety of roles served by the cell membrane, its composition and structure are complex, making it difficult to study. Bioorthogonal reactions, such as the strain promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC), are powerful tools for exploring the function of biomolecules in their native environment but have been largely unexplored within the context of lipid bilayers. Here, we developed a new approach to study the SPAAC reaction in liposomal membranes using azide- and strained alkyne-functionalized Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) dye pairs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNovel methods to construct small molecule-protein bioconjugates are integral to the development of new biomedicines for a variety of diseases. C-C linked bioconjugates are increasingly desirable in this application due to their stability and can be accessed through cross aldol bioconjugation of reactive α-oxo aldehyde handles easily introduced at the N-terminus of proteins by periodate oxidation. We previously developed an organocatalyst-mediated protein aldol ligation (OPAL) for chemical modification of these reactive aldehydes, but the efficiency of this method was limited when a proline residue was directly adjacent to the N-terminus due to intramolecular hemiaminal formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell surface sugar 5,7-diacetyl pseudaminic acid (Pse5Ac7Ac) is a bacterial analogue of the ubiquitous sialic acid, Neu5Ac, and contributes to the virulence of a number of multidrug resistant bacteria, including ESKAPE pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter baumannii. Despite its discovery in the surface glycans of bacteria over thirty years ago, to date no glycosyltransferase enzymes (GTs) dedicated to the synthesis of a pseudaminic acid glycosidic linkage have been unequivocally characterised in vitro. Herein we demonstrate that A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTruncated thioester ,-diacetylcysteamine (SNAc) was utilised as a co-factor mimic for PseH, an acetyl-coA dependent aminoglycoside -acetyltransferase, in the biosynthesis of the bacterial sugar, pseudaminic acid. Additionally, an azido-SNAc analogue was used to smuggle 7-azide functionality into the pseudaminic acid backbone, facilitating its use as a reporter of pseudaminyltransferase activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Sulfo-NHS ester is a mainstay reagent for facilitating amide bond formation between carboxylic acids and amine functionalities in water. However, the preparation of Sulfo-NHS esters currently requires hydrophobic carboxylic acids, which are poorly water-soluble, to first be reacted with the -hydroxysulfosuccinimide sodium salt, which is insoluble in organic solvents. The mutually incompatible solvation requirements thus complicate the synthesis of Sulfo-NHS esters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFβ-Mannosides are ubiquitous in nature, with diverse roles in many biological processes. Notably, Manβ1,4GlcNAc a constituent of the core -glycan in eukaryotes was recently identified as an immune activator, highlighting its potential for use in immunotherapy. Despite their biological significance, the synthesis of β-mannosidic linkages remains one of the major challenges in glycoscience.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAryl diazonium cations are versatile bioconjugation reagents due to their reactivity towards electron-rich aryl residues and secondary amines, but historically their usage has been hampered by both their short lifespan in aqueous solution and the harsh conditions required to generate them in situ. Triazabutadienes address many of these issues as they are stable enough to endure multiple-step chemical syntheses and can persist for several hours in aqueous solution, yet upon UV-exposure rapidly release aryl diazonium cations under biologically-relevant conditions. This paper describes the synthesis of a novel maleimide-functionalized triazabutadiene suitable for site-selectively installing aryl diazonium cations into proteins at neutral pH; we show reaction with this molecule and a surface-cysteine of a thiol disulfide oxidoreductase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein N-termini provide uniquely reactive motifs for single site protein modification. Though a number of reactions have been developed to target this site, the selectivity, generality, and stability of the conjugates formed has not been studied. We have therefore undertaken a comprehensive comparative study of the most promising methods for N-terminal protein modification, and find that there is no 'one size fits all' approach, necessitating reagent screening for a particular protein or application.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFα-Formylglycine (fGly) is a rare residue located in the active site of sulfatases and serves as a precursor to pharmaceutically relevant motifs. The installation of fGly motifs into peptides is currently challenging due to degradation under the acidic and nucleophile-rich conditions accompanying resin cleavage during solid-phase peptide synthesis. We report the synthesis of acid- and nucleophile-tolerant α-formylglycine building blocks from vitamin C and use them to prepare callyaerin A, a macrocyclic peptide containing an fGly-derived motif.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAltered glycoprotein expression is an undisputed corollary of cancer development. Understanding these alterations is paramount but hampered by limitations underlying cellular model systems. For instance, the intricate interactions between tumour and host cannot be adequately recapitulated in monoculture of tumour-derived cell lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSite-selective chemical methods for protein bioconjugation have revolutionized the fields of cell and chemical biology through the development of novel protein/enzyme probes bearing fluorescent, spectroscopic, or even toxic cargos. Herein, we report two new methods for the bioconjugation of α-oxo aldehyde handles within proteins using small molecule aniline and/or phenol probes. The "α-oxo-Mannich" and "catalyst-free aldol" ligations both compete for the electrophilic α-oxo aldehyde, which displays pH divergent reactivity proceeding through the "Mannich" pathway at acidic pH to afford bifunctionalized bioconjugates, and the "catalyst-free aldol" pathway at neutral pH to afford monofunctionalized bioconjugates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe long-term changes of liver stiffness (LS) in patients who achieve viral clearance after direct-acting anti-HCV therapy remain undefined. We conducted a multicentre prospective study to investigate this aspect. Patients with HCV infection treated with DAAs were enrolled from six Italian centres; they underwent clinical, biochemical, ultrasound and transient elastography evaluations before treatment (T0), 12 weeks (SVR12) and 24 months (T24) after the end of therapy.
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