The success of microarrays, such as DNA chips, for biosample screening with minimal sample usage has led to a variety of technologies for assays on glass slides. Unfortunately, for small molecules, such as carbohydrates, these methods usually rely on covalent bond formation, which requires unique functional handles and multiple chemical steps. A new simpler concept in microarray formation is based on noncovalent fluorous-based interactions. A fluorous tail is designed not only to aid in saccharide purification but also to allow direct formation of carbohydrate microarrays on fluorous-derivatized glass slides for biological screening with lectins, such as concanavalin A. The noncovalent interactions in the fluorous-based array are even strong enough to withstand the detergents used in assays with the Erythrina crystagalli lectin. Additionally, the utility of benzyl carbonate protecting groups on fucose building blocks for the formation of alpha-linkages is demonstrated.
Type II polyketide synthases are biosynthetic enzymatic pathways responsible for the production of complex aromatic natural products with important biological activities. In these systems, biosynthetic intermediates are covalently bound to a small acyl carrier protein that associates with the synthase enzymes and delivers the bound intermediate to each active site. In the closely related fatty acid synthases of bacteria and plants, the acyl carrier protein acts to sequester and protect attached intermediates within its helices. Here we investigate the type II polyketide synthase acyl carrier protein from the actinorhodin biosynthetic pathway and demonstrate its ability to internalize the tricyclic, polar molecule emodic acid. Elucidating the interaction of acyl carrier proteins with bound analogs resembling late-stage intermediates in the actinorhodin pathway could prove valuable in efforts to engineer these systems towards rational design and biosynthesis of novel compounds.
The drive to understand the molecular determinants of carbohydrate binding as well as the search for more chemically and biochemically stable sugar derivatives and carbohydrate-based therapeutics has led to the synthesis of a variety of analogues that replace the glycosidic oxygen with sulfur or carbon. In contrast, the effect of substitution of the ring oxygen on the conformations and enzymatic tolerance of sugars has been largely neglected, in part because of the difficulty in obtaining these analogues. Herein we report the first synthesis of the carbocyclic version of the most common naturally occurring sugar-1-phosphate, glucose-1-phosphate, and its evaluation with bacterial and eukaryotic sugar nucleotidyltransferases. In contrast to results with the eukaryotic enzyme, the carbaglucose-1-phosphate serves as a substrate for the bacterial enzyme to provide the carbocyclic uridinediphosphoglucose. This result demonstrates the first chemoenzymatic strategy to this class of glycosyltransferase inhibitors and stable activated sugar mimics for cocrystallization with glycosyltransferases and their glycosyl acceptors. This difference in turnover between enzymes also suggests the possibility of using sugar nucleotidyltransferases in vivo to convert prodrug forms of glycosyltransferase inhibitors. In addition, we report several microwave-assisted reactions, including a five minute Ferrier rearrangement with palladium, that accelerate the synthesis of carbocyclic sugars for further studies.
[reaction: see text] Addition of isopropyl-beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) to bacterial cultures is often used to induce expression of plasmid-based genes for the production of recombinant proteins under control of the lac promoter, but a simple method to circumvent the inherent instability of this compound has not been addressed experimentally. Herein we report the first synthesis of isobutyl-C-galactoside (IBCG), the C-glycoside analogue of IPTG, and show that IBCG is superior to IPTG in inducing protein expression over long induction times.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.