Journal
CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 23, Issue 13, Pages -Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.202100327
Keywords
adhesion; glycoproteins; glycosylation; lectins; proliferation
Funding
- NIH [CA242351]
- NSERC [707321]
- SFI Investigator Programme Awards [16/IA/4419, 13/IA/1959, 16/RC/3889]
- AFOR (Association For Orthopaedic Research) foundation grant
- Johnson&Johnson Medical Products GmbH scholarship [GMAFS20512]
- Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness [BFU 201677835-R]
- Projekt DEAL
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The text emphasizes the importance of the sugar code, highlighting the diversity of sugars and the specificity in recognition processes. The enormous potential of glycan biosynthetic enzymes and the development of sugar receptors lay the foundation for understanding the sugar code.
A code is defined by the nature of the symbols, which are used to generate information-storing combinations (e. g. oligo- and polymers). Like nucleic acids and proteins, oligo- and polysaccharides are ubiquitous, and they are a biochemical platform for establishing molecular messages. Of note, the letters of the sugar code system (third alphabet of life) excel in coding capacity by making an unsurpassed versatility for isomer (code word) formation possible by variability in anomery and linkage position of the glycosidic bond, ring size and branching. The enzymatic machinery for glycan biosynthesis (writers) realizes this enormous potential for building a large vocabulary. It includes possibilities for dynamic editing/erasing as known from nucleic acids and proteins. Matching the glycome diversity, a large panel of sugar receptors (lectins) has developed based on more than a dozen folds. Lectins 'read' the glycan-encoded information. Hydrogen/coordination bonding and ionic pairing together with stacking and C-H/pi-interactions as well as modes of spatial glycan presentation underlie the selectivity and specificity of glycan-lectin recognition. Modular design of lectins together with glycan display and the nature of the cognate glycoconjugate account for the large number of post-binding events. They give an entry to the glycan vocabulary its functional, often context-dependent meaning(s), hereby building the dictionary of the sugar code.
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