4.4 Article

A Fluorescent sp2-Iminosugar With Pharmacological Chaperone Activity for Gaucher Disease: Synthesis and Intracellular Distribution Studies

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 11, Issue 17, Pages 2453-2464

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201000323

Keywords

chaperones; fluorescent probes; Gaucher disease; glucosidases; iminosugars

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Science, Sports, and Technology of Japan [20390297, 13680918, 14207106]
  2. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan [H14-Kokoro-017, H17-Kokoro-019, H20-Kokoro-022]
  3. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [CTQ2006-15515-C02-01/BQU, CTQ2007-61180/PPQ]
  4. Junta de Andalucia [P08-FQM-03711]
  5. European Union
  6. Fundacion Ramon Areces
  7. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [13680918, 20390297, 22390207, 14207106] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Gaucher disease (GD) is the most prevalent lysosomal-storage disorder, it is caused by mutations of acid beta-glucosidase (beta-glucocerebrosidase; beta-Glu). Recently, we found that bicyclic nojirimycin (NJ) derivatives of the sp(2)-iminosugar type, including the 6-thio-N'-octyl-(5N,6S)-octyliminomethylidene derivative (6S-NOI-NJ), behaved as very selective competitive inhibitors of the lysosomal beta-Glu and exhibited remarkable chaperone activities for several GD mutations. To obtain information about the cellular uptake pathway and intracellular distribution of this family of chaperones, we have synthesized a fluorescent analogue that maintains the fused piperidine-thiazolidine bicyclic skeleton and incorporates a dansyl group in the N'-substituent, namely 6-thio-(5N, 6S)-[4-(N'-dansylamino)butyliminomethyli-dene] nojirimycin (6S-NDI-NJ). This structural modification does not significantly modify the biological activity of the glycomimetic as a chemical chaperone. Our study showed that 6S-NDI-NJ is mainly located in lysosome-related organelles in both normal and GD fibroblasts, and the fluorescent intensity of 6S-NDI-NJ in the lysosome is related to the beta-Glu concentration level. 6S-NDI-NJ also can enter cultured neuronal cells and act as a chaperone. Competitive inhibition studies of 6S-NDI-NJ uptake in fibroblasts showed that high concentrations of D-glucose have no effect on chaperone internalization, suggesting that it enters the cells through glucose-transporter-independent mechanisms.

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