Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Glycosylation" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 A thermostable and inhibitor resistant β-glucosidase from Rasamsonia emersonii for efficient hydrolysis of lignocellulosics biomass Raheja Y; Singh V; Sharma G; Tsang A; Chadha BS; 38470501
CSFG
2 A "biphasic glycosyltransferase high-throughput screen" identifies novel anthraquinone glycosides in the diversification of phenolic natural products Mohideen FI; Kwan DH; 36682498
CHEMBIOCHEM
3 Engineering the Enzyme Toolbox to Tailor Glycosylation in Small Molecule Natural Products and Protein Biologics Ouadhi S; López DMV; Mohideen FI; Kwan DH; 36444941
ENCS
4 TRAPPC11-related muscular dystrophy with hypoglycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan in skeletal muscle and brain Munot P; McCrea N; Torelli S; Manzur A; Sewry C; Chambers D; Feng L; Ala P; Zaharieva I; Ragge N; Roper H; Marton T; Cox P; Milev MP; Liang WC; Maruyama S; Nishino I; Sacher M; Phadke R; Muntoni F; 34648194
BIOLOGY
5 Exploring the Role of Glycans in the Interaction of SARS-CoV-2 RBD and Human Receptor ACE2 Nguyen K; Chakraborty S; Mansbach RA; Korber B; Gnanakaran S; 34067878
PHYSICS
6 TRAPPC11 and GOSR2 mutations associate with hypoglycosylation of α-dystroglycan and muscular dystrophy. Larson AA, Baker PR, Milev MP, Press CA, Sokol RJ, Cox MO, Lekostaj JK, Stence AA, Bossler AD, Mueller JM, Prematilake K, Tadjo TF, Williams CA, Sacher M, Moore SA 29855340
BIOLOGY

 

Title:A "biphasic glycosyltransferase high-throughput screen" identifies novel anthraquinone glycosides in the diversification of phenolic natural products
Authors:Mohideen FIKwan DH
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36682498/
DOI:10.1016/j.jbc.2023.102931
Publication:The Journal of biological chemistry
Keywords:combinatorial enzymatic synthesisglycodiversificationglycosylationglycosyltransferaseshigh-throughput screeningnatural products
PMID:36682498 Category: Date Added:2023-01-23
Dept Affiliation: CHEMBIOCHEM
1 Department of Biology, Centre for Applied Synthetic Biology, and Centre for Structural and Functional Genomics, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H4B 1R6.
2 Department of Biology, Centre for Applied Synthetic Biology, and Centre for Structural and Functional Genomics, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H4B 1R6; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H4B 1R6; PROTEO, Quebec Network for Research on Protein Function, Structure, and Engineering, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada G1V 0A6. Electronic address: david.kwan@concordia.ca.

Description:

The sugar moieties of many glycosylated small molecule natural products are essential for their biological activity. Glycosyltransferases (GTs) are the enzymes responsible for installing these sugar moieties on a variety of biomolecules. Several GTs that are active on natural products are inherently substrate-promiscuous and thus serve as useful tools in manipulating natural product glycosylation to generate new combinations of sugar units (glycone) and scaffold molecules (aglycone) in a process called glycodiversification. It is important to have an effective screening tool to detect the activity of promiscuous enzymes and their resulting glycoside products. Towards this aim, we have developed a strategy for screening natural product GTs in a high-throughput fashion enabled by rapid isolation and detection of chromophoric or fluorescent glycosylated natural products. This involves a solvent extraction step to isolate the resulting polar glycoside product from the unreacted aglycone acceptor substrate and the detection of the formed glycoside by the innate absorbance or fluorescence of the aglycone moiety. Using our approach, we screened a collection of natural product GTs against a panel of precursors to therapeutically important molecules. Three GTs showed previously unreported promiscuity towards anthraquinones resulting in novel e-rhodomycinone glycosides. Considering the pharmaceutical value of the clinically used anthraquinone glycosides that are biosynthesized from an e-rhodomycinone precursor, and the significance that the sugar moiety has on the biological activity of these drugs, our results are of particular importance towards the glycodiversification of therapeutics in this class. The GTs identified and the novel compounds that they produce show promise towards new biocatalytic tools and therapeutics.





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