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Fulfilling Koch's postulates in glycoscience: HCELL, GPS and translational glycobiology

期刊

GLYCOBIOLOGY
卷 26, 期 6, 页码 560-570

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cww026

关键词

exofucosylation; fucosyltransferase; mesenchymal stem cell; hematopoietic stem cell; cell migration

资金

  1. Department of Veterans Affairs
  2. National Institutes of Health (NHLBI) [PO1 HL107146, RO1 HL60528, RO1 HL73714]
  3. National Institutes of Health (NCI) [RO1 CA121335]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Glycoscience-based research that is performed expressly to address medical necessity and improve patient outcomes is called translational glycobiology. In the 19th century, Robert Koch proposed a set of postulates to rigorously establish causality in microbial pathogenesis, and these postulates can be reshaped to guide knowledge into how naturally-expressed glycoconjugates direct molecular processes critical to human well-being. Studies in the 1990s indicated that E-selectin, an endothelial lectin that binds sialofucosylated carbohydrate determinants, is constitutively expressed on marrow microvessels, and investigations in my laboratory indicated that human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) uniquely express high levels of a specialized glycoform of CD44 called hematopoietic cell E-/L-selectin ligand (HCELL) that functions as a highly potent E-selectin ligand. To assess the role of HCELL in directing HSC migration to marrow, a method called glycosyltransferase-programmed stereosubstitution (GPS) was developed to custom-modify CD44 glycans to enforce HCELL expression on viable cell surfaces. Human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are devoid of E-selectin ligands, but GPS-based glycoengineering of CD44 on MSCs licenses homing of these cells to marrow in vivo, providing direct evidence that HCELL serves as a bone marrow homing receptor. This review will discuss the molecular basis of cell migration in historical context, will describe the discovery of HCELL and its function as the bone marrow homing receptor, and will inform on how glycoengineering of CD44 serves as a model for adapting Koch's postulates to elucidate the key roles that glycoconjugates play in human biology and for realizing the immense impact of translational glycobiology in clinical medicine.

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