Publication | Open Access
Glycosyl Fluorides Can Function as Substrates for Nucleotide Phosphosugar-dependent Glycosyltransferases
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Citations
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References
1999
Year
Bioorganic ChemistryGlycosyl FluorideEngineeringGlycobiologyMolecular BiologyPolysaccharideChemical BiologyBiosynthesisAlpha-galactosyl FluorideGlycosylationBiochemistryBiocatalysisOligonucleotideNucleotide Phosphosugar-dependent GlycosyltransferasesProtein PhosphorylationBiomolecular EngineeringCoupled AssayNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisBiotechnologyCarbohydrate-protein Interaction
alpha-Galactosyl fluoride is shown to function as a substrate, in place of uridine-5'-diphosphogalactose, for the alpha-galactosyltransferase from Neisseria meningitidis. The reaction only occurs in the presence of catalytic quantities of uridine 5'-diphosphate. In the presence of galactosyl acceptors, the expected oligosaccharide product is formed in essentially quantitative yields, reaction having been performed on multi-milligram scales. In the absence of a suitable acceptor, the enzyme synthesizes uridine-5'-diphosphogalactose, as demonstrated through a coupled assay in which uridine-5'-diphosphogalactose is converted to uridine-5'-diphosphoglucuronic acid with conversion of NAD to NADH. These glycosyl fluoride substrates therefore offer the potential of an inexpensive alternative donor substrate in the synthesis of oligosaccharides as well a means of generating steady state concentrations of nucleotide diphosphate sugars for in situ use by other enzymes. Further, they should prove valuable as mechanistic probes.
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