The heparan sulfate (HS)-rich extracellular matrix (ECM) serves as an initial interaction site for the homotrimeric spike (S) protein of SARS-CoV-2 to facilitate subsequent docking to angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptors and cellular infection. More recent variants, notably Omicron, have evolved by swapping several amino acids to positively charged residues to enhance the interaction of the S-protein trimer with the negatively charged HS. However, these enhanced interactions may reduce Omicron's ability to move through the HS-rich ECM to effectively find ACE2 receptors and infect cells, raising the question of how to mechanistically explain HS-associated viral movement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids
September 2023
Fibrillary aggregated α-synuclein represents the neurologic hallmark of Parkinson's disease and is considered to play a causative role in the disease. Although the causes leading to α-synuclein aggregation are not clear, the GM1 ganglioside interaction is recognized to prevent this process. How GM1 exerts these functions is not completely clear, although a primary role of its soluble oligosaccharide (GM1-OS) is emerging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpportunistic infections from multidrug-resistant pathogens such as are a threatening risk for hospital-bound patients suffering from immunocompromised conditions or cystic fibrosis. BC2L-C lectin has been linked to bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation, thus hindering its activity is seen as a promising strategy to reduce the severity of the infection. We recently described the first bifunctional ligands of the trimeric N-terminal domain of BC2L-C (BC2L-C-Nt), capable of simultaneously engaging its fucose-specific sugar binding site and a vicinal region at the interface between two monomers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCadherins promote cell-cell adhesion by forming homophilic interactions their N-terminal extracellular domains. Hence, they have broad-ranging physiological effects on tissue organization and homeostasis. When dysregulated, cadherins contribute to different aspects of cancer progression and metastasis; therefore, targeting the cadherin adhesive interface with small-molecule antagonists is expected to have potential therapeutic and diagnostic value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a serious threat to our society from both the medical and economic point of view, while the antibiotic discovery pipeline has been dwindling over the last decades. Targeting non-essential bacterial pathways, such as those leading to antibiotic persistence, a bacterial bet-hedging strategy, will lead to new molecular entities displaying low selective pressure, thereby reducing the insurgence of AMR. Here, we describe a way to target (p)ppGpp (guanosine tetra- or penta-phosphate) signaling, a non-essential pathway involved in the formation of persisters, with a structure-based approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere, two conformationally constrained sialyl analogues were synthesized and characterized in their interaction with the inhibitory Siglec, human CD22 (h-CD22). An orthogonal approach, including biophysical assays (SPR and fluorescence), ligand-based NMR techniques, and molecular modelling, was employed to disentangle the interaction mechanisms at a molecular level. The results showed that the Sialyl-TnThr antigen analogue represents a promising scaffold for the design of novel h-CD22 inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Mol Biosci
February 2021
Bacteria have developed different bet hedging strategies to survive hostile environments and stressful conditions with persistency being maybe the most elegant yet still poorly understood one. Persisters' temporary tolerance to antibiotic treatment hints at their role not only in chronic and recurrent infections but also in the insurgence of resistant strains. Therefore, hampering persisters formation might represent an innovative strategy in the quest for new effective antimicrobial compounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSiglecs (sialic acid binding immunoglobulin (Ig)-like lectins) constitute a group of 15 human and 9 murine cell-surface transmembrane receptors belonging to the I-type lectin family, mostly expressed on innate immune cells and characterized by broadly similar structural features. Here, the prominent inhibitory CD22 (Siglec-2), well known in maintaining tolerance and preventing autoimmune responses on B cells, is studied in its human and murine forms in complex with sialoglycans. In detail, the role of the -glycolyl neuraminic acid (Neu5Gc) moiety in the interaction with both orthologues was explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegrin ligands containing the tripeptide sequences Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) and -Asp-Gly- Arg (DGR) were actively investigated as inhibitors of tumor angiogenesis and directing unit in tumor-targeting drug conjugates. Reported herein is the synthesis, of two RGD and one DGR cyclic peptidomimetics containing (1,2) and (1,2) -2-amino-1-cyclopentanecarboxylic acid (-β-ACPC), using a mixed solid phase/solution phase synthetic protocol. The three ligands were examined in vitro in competitive binding assays to the purified αβ and αβ receptors using biotinylated vitronectin (αβ) and fibronectin (αβ) as natural displaced ligands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConstruction of small molecule ligand (SML) based delivery systems has been performed starting from a polyfunctionalized isoxazoline scaffold, whose αβ and αβ integrins' potency has been already established. The synthesis of this novel class of ligands was obtained by conjugation of linkers to the heterocyclic core via Huisgen-click reaction, with the aim to use them as "shuttles" for selective delivery of diagnostic agents to cancer cells, exploring the effects of the side chains in the interaction with the target. Compounds 17b and 24 showed excellent potency towards αβ integrin acting as selective antagonist and agonist respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPresented herein is a study of the conformation and reactivity of highly reactive thioglycoside donors. The structural studies have been conducted using NMR spectroscopy and computational methods. The reactivity of these donors has been investigated in bromine-promoted glycosylations of aliphatic and sugar alcohols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCadherins are homophilic cell-cell adhesion molecules whose aberrant expression has often been shown to correlate with different stages of tumor progression. In this work, we investigate the interaction of two peptidomimetic ligands with the extracellular portion of human E-cadherin using a combination of NMR and computational techniques. Both ligands have been previously developed as mimics of the tetrapeptide sequence Asp1-Trp2-Val3-Ile4 of the cadherin adhesion arm, and have been shown to inhibit E-cadherin-mediated adhesion in epithelial ovarian cancer cells with millimolar potency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLigand-based control of protein functional motions can provide novel opportunities in the study of fundamental biological mechanisms and in the development of novel therapeutics. In this work we addressed the ligand-based modulation of integrin functions. Inhibitors of integrin α β are interesting anticancer agents but their molecular mechanisms are still unclear: Peptides and peptidomimetics characterized by the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) or isoAsp-Gly-Arg (isoDGR) binding motifs have shown controversial agonist/antagonist effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA library of mannose- and fucose-based glycomimetics was synthesized and screened in a microarray format against a set of C-type lectin receptors (CLRs) that included DC-SIGN, DC-SIGNR, langerin, and dectin-2. Glycomimetic ligands able to interact with dectin-2 were identified for the first time. Comparative analysis of binding profiles allowed their selectivity against other CLRs to be probed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction of a small library of cyclic DKP-RGD peptidomimetics with αβ integrin has been investigated by means of an integrated experimental and computational approach. Bioaffinity NMR techniques, including saturation transfer difference (STD) and transferred NOESY, were applied to the ligands in a suspension of intact MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells, in which integrin αβ is highly expressed. The NMR data were compared with the docking calculations of the RGD ligands in the crystal structure of the αβ binding site, and were integrated with competitive binding assays to the purified αβ integrin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding how binding events modulate functional motions of multidomain proteins is a major issue in chemical biology. We address several aspects of this problem by analyzing the differential dynamics of αvβ3 integrin bound to wild type (wtFN10, agonist) or high affinity (hFN10, antagonist) mutants of fibronectin. We compare the dynamics of complexes from large-scale domain motions to inter-residue coordinated fluctuations to characterize the distinctive traits of conformational evolution and shed light on the determinants of differential αvβ3 activation induced by different FN sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel series of β-lactam derivatives that was designed and synthesized to target RGD-binding and leukocyte integrins is reported. The compound library was evaluated by investigating the effects on integrin-mediated cell adhesion and cell signaling in cell lines expressing αβ, αβ, αβ, αβ, αβ, αβ, and αβ integrins. SAR analysis of the new series of azetidinones enabled the recognition of structural elements associated with integrin selectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCadherins are transmembrane cell adhesion proteins whose aberrant expression often correlates with cancer development and proliferation. We report the crystal structure of an E-cadherin extracellular fragment in complex with a peptidomimetic compound that was previously shown to partially inhibit cadherin homophilic adhesion. The structure reveals an unexpected binding mode and allows the identification of a druggable cadherin interface, thus paving the way to a future structure-guided design of cell adhesion inhibitors against cadherin-expressing solid tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree-dimensional domain swapping is an important mode of protein association leading to the formation of stable dimers. Monomers associating via this mechanism mutually exchange a domain to form a homodimer. Classical cadherins, an increasingly important target for anticancer therapy, use domain swapping to mediate cell adhesion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a first set of peptidomimetic ligands mimicking the adhesive interface identified by recent crystallographic structures of E- and N-cadherin. Compounds 2 and 3 inhibit adhesion of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) cells with improved efficacy compared to the ADH-1 peptide, a N-cadherin antagonist that is in early clinical trials in EOC patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel class of low molecular weight ligands of αvβ₃ and α₅β₁ integrins, that possess a dehydro-β-amino acid as conformationally constrained core, linked to the pharmacophoric moieties mimicking the RGD recognition sequence, have been synthesized through a very simple protocol. Cell adhesion assays and integrin-mediated signaling activation experiments suggested a good affinity of these compounds toward both integrin receptors. Moreover, further elongation with two glycine units allowed to obtain an excellent dual inhibitor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNMR experiments (transferred NOE and Saturation Transfer Difference) were used to shed light on the binding epitope of RGD peptidomimetics 1-3 with integrins αvβ3 and α(IIb)β3, expressed on the membrane of ECV304 bladder cancer cells and human platelets, respectively. The NMR results were supported by docking calculations of 1-3 in the active sites of αvβ3 and α(IIb)β3 integrin receptors and were compared to the results of competitive αvβ3 receptor binding assays and competitive ECV304 cell adhesion experiments. While cis RGD ligand 1 interacts mainly with the α integrin subunit through its basic guanidine group, trans RGD ligands 2 and 3 are able to interact with both the α and β integrin subunits via an electrostatic clamp.
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