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Chemical Synthesis and Enzymatic Testing of CMP‐Sialic Acid Derivatives
Author(s) -
Wolf Saskia,
Warnecke Svenja,
Ehrit Jörg,
Freiberger Friedrich,
GerardySchahn Rita,
Meier Chris
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
chembiochem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.05
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 1439-7633
pISSN - 1439-4227
DOI - 10.1002/cbic.201200471
Subject(s) - nucleotide , chemistry , anomer , nucleophile , stereochemistry , enzyme , yield (engineering) , biochemistry , materials science , metallurgy , gene , catalysis
The cyclo Sal approach has been used in the past for the synthesis of a range of phosphorylated bioconjugates. In those reports, cyclo Sal nucleotides were allowed to react with different phosphate nucleophiles. With glycopyranosyl phosphates as nucleophiles, diphosphate‐linked sugar nucleotides were formed. Here, cyclo Sal‐nucleotides were used to prepare monophosphate‐linked sugar nucleotides successfully in high anomeric purity and high chemical yield. The method was successfully used for the synthesis of three nucleotide glycopyranoses as model compounds. The method was then applied to the syntheses of CMP‐ N ‐acetyl‐neuraminic acids (CMP‐Neu5 N Ac) and of four derivatives with different modifications at their amino functions ( N ‐propanoyl, N ‐butanoyl, N ‐pentanoyl and N ‐cyclopropylcarbonyl). The compounds were used for initial enzymatic studies with a bacterial polysialyltransferase (polyST). Surprisingly, the enzyme showed marked differences in terms of utilisation of the four derivatives. The N ‐propanoyl, N ‐butanoyl, and N ‐pentanoyl derivatives were efficiently used in a first transfer with a fluorescently labelled trisialo‐acceptor. However, elongation of the resulting tetrasialo‐acceptors worsened progressively with the size of the N ‐acyl chain. The N ‐pentanoyl derivative allowed a single transfer, leading to a capped tetramer. The N ‐cyclopropylcarbonyl derivative was not transferred.