4.4 Review

Metabolic glycoengineering: Sialic acid and beyond

Journal

GLYCOBIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 12, Pages 1382-1401

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cwp115

Keywords

carbohydrate-based drugs; glycosylation; metabolic glycoengineering; sialic acid

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [EB005692-03, CA112314-04]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This report provides a perspective on metabolic glycoengineering methodology developed over the past two decades that allows natural sialic acids to be replaced with chemical variants in living cells and animals. Examples are given demonstrating how this technology provides the glycoscientist with chemical tools that are beginning to reproduce Mother Nature's control over complex biological systems - such as the human brain - through subtle modifications in sialic acid chemistry. Several metabolic substrates (e.g., ManNAc, Neu5Ac, and CMP-Neu5Ac analogs) can be used to feed flux into the sialic acid biosynthetic pathway resulting in numerous - and sometime quite unexpected - biological repercussions upon nonnatural sialoside display in cellular glycans. Once on the cell surface, ketone-, azide-, thiol-, or alkyne-modified glycans can be transformed with numerous ligands via bioorthogonal chemoselective ligation reactions, greatly increasing the versatility and potential application of this technology. Recently, sialic acid glycoengineering methodology has been extended to other pathways with analog incorporation now possible in surface-displayed GalNAc and fucose residues as well as nucleocytoplasmic O-GlcNAc-modified proteins. Finally, recent efforts to increase the druggability of sugar analogs used in metabolic glycoengineering, which have resulted in unanticipated scaffold-dependent activities, are summarized.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available