Publication | Open Access
Synthesis and evaluation of<i>N</i><sup>α</sup>,<i>N</i><sup>ε</sup>-diacetyl-<scp>l</scp>-lysine-inositol conjugates as cancer-selective probes for metabolic engineering of GPIs and GPI-anchored proteins
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Citations
28
References
2020
Year
Gpi-anchored ProteinsEngineeringMolecular BiologyChemical BiologyBiosynthesisMetabolic EngineeringNatural Product BiosynthesisCancer MetabolismGpi BiosynthesisGlycosylationCancer-selective ProbesBiochemistryBioconjugationBiochemical InteractionCancer CellsBio-orthogonal ChemistryBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistrySmall Molecules
Two myo-inositol derivatives having an Nα,Nε-diacetyl-l-lysine (Ac2Lys) moiety linked to the inositol 1-O-position through a self-cleavable linker and a metabolically stable 2-azidoethyl group linked to the inositol 3-O- and 4-O-positions, respectively, were designed and synthesized. The Ac2Lys moiety blocking the inositol 1-O-position required for GPI biosynthesis was expected to be removable by a combination of two enzymes, histone deacetylase (HDAC) and cathepsin L (CTSL), abundantly expressed in cancer cells, but not in normal cells, to transform these inositol derivatives into biosynthetically useful products with a free 1-O-position. As a result, it was found that these inositol derivatives could be incorporated into the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) biosynthetic pathway by cancer cells, but not by normal cells, to express azide-labeled GPIs and GPI-anchored proteins on cell surfaces. Consequently, this study has established a novel strategy and new molecular tools for selective metabolic labeling of cancer cells, which should be useful for various biological studies and applications.
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