4.7 Article

Bivalent O-glycoside mimetics with S/disulfide/Se substitutions and aromatic core: Synthesis, molecular modeling and inhibitory activity on biomedically relevant lectins in assays of increasing physiological relevance

Journal

BIOORGANIC & MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 12, Pages 3158-3170

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2017.04.011

Keywords

Agglutinin; Glycosyldisulfides; Histochemistry; Lectin; Selenoglycosides; Sugar code; Thioglycosides

Funding

  1. Verein zur Forderung des biologisch-technologischen Fortschritts in der Medizin e.V. (Heidelberg, Germany)
  2. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund [OTKA NN-109671]
  3. Marie Curie Career Integration Grant [303917]
  4. Research Foundation-Flanders [1508414N, 1525517N]
  5. EU
  6. European Regional Development Fund [GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00008]

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The emerging significance of recognition of cellular glycans by lectins for diverse aspects of pathophysiology is a strong incentive for considering development of bioactive and non-hydrolyzable glycoside derivatives, for example by introducing S/Se atoms and the disulfide group instead of oxygen into the glycosidic linkage. We report the synthesis of 12 bivalent thio-, disulfido- and selenoglycosides attached to benzene/naphthalene cores. They present galactose, for blocking a plant toxin, or lactose, the canonical ligand of adhesion/growth-regulatory galectins. Modeling reveals unrestrained flexibility and inter-head group distances too small to bridge two sites in the same lectin. Inhibitory activity was first detected by solid-phase assays using a surface-presented glycoprotein, with relative activity enhancements per sugar unit relative to free cognate sugar up to nearly 10fold. Inhibitory activity was also seen on lectin binding to surfaces of human carcinoma cells. In order to proceed to characterize this capacity in the tissue context monitoring of lectin binding in the presence of inhibitors was extended to sections of three types of murine organs as models. This procedure proved to be well-suited to determine relative activity levels of the glycocompounds to block binding of the toxin and different human galectins to natural glycoconjugates at different sites in sections. The results on most effective inhibition by two naphthalene-based disulfides and a selenide raise the perspective for broad applicability of the histochemical assay in testing glycoclusters that target biomedically relevant lectins. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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