4.7 Article

Immunoprotective neo-glycoproteins: Chemoenzymatic synthesis of multivalent glycomimetics for inhibition of cancer-related galectin-3

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 220, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113500

Keywords

Cancer; Galectin-3; Glycomimetic; Inhibition; Neo-glycoprotein

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [20-00215S]
  2. COST Action [LTC19038, CA18103, LTC18041, CA16225]
  3. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic [LM2018133]
  4. DAAD [DAAD-20-04]
  5. Czech Academy of Sciences [DAAD-20-04]

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Galectin-3 plays a crucial role in cancerogenesis, and targeting it with artificial glycomimetics has shown a strong inhibitory effect on cancer cells. The synthesized neo-glycoproteins exhibit high selectivity, non-toxicity, and efficiency in targeting exogenous galectin-3, offering potential for immunomodulatory treatment of galectin-3-overexpressing cancers.
Galectin-3 plays a crucial role in cancerogenesis; its targeting is a prospective pathway in cancer diagnostics and therapy. Multivalent presentation of glycans was shown to strongly increase the affinity of glycoconjugates to galectin-3. Further strengthening of interaction with galectin-3 may be accomplished using artificial glycomimetics with apt aryl substitutions. We established a new, as yet undescribed chemoenzymatic method to produce selective C-3-substituted N,N'-diacetyllactosamine glycomimetics and coupled them to human serum albumin. From a library of enzymes, only beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase from Talaromyces flavus was able to efficiently synthesize the C-3-propargylated disaccharide. Various aryl residues were attached to the functionalized N,N'-diacetyllactosamine via click chemistry to assess the impact of the aromatic substitution. In ELISA-type assays with galectin-3, free glycomimetics exhibited up to 43-fold stronger inhibitory potency to Gal-3 than the lactose standard. Coupling to human serum albumin afforded multivalent neo-glycoproteins with up to 4209-fold increased inhibitory potency per glycan compared to the monovalent lactose standard. Surface plasmon resonance brought further information on the kinetics of galectin-3 inhibition. The potential of prepared neo-glycoproteins to target galectin-3 was demonstrated on colorectal adenocarcinoma DLD-1 cells. We investigated the uptake of neo-glycoproteins into cells and observed limited non-specific transport into the cytoplasm. Therefore, neo-glycoproteins primarily act as efficient scavengers of exogenous galectin-3 of cancer cells, inhibiting its interaction with the cell surface, and protecting T-lymphocytes against galectin-3-induced apoptosis. The present neo-glycoproteins combine the advantage of a straightforward synthesis, selectivity, non-toxicity, and high efficiency for targeting exogenous galectin-3, with possible application in the immunomodulatory treatment of galectin-3-overexpressing cancers. (C) 2021 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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