Carbohydrate-lectin interactions are relatively weak. As they play an important role in biological recognition processes, multivalent glycan ligands are designed to enhance binding affinity and inhibitory potency. We here report on novel neo-glycoproteins based on bovine serum albumin as scaffold for multivalent presentation of ligands for galectins. We prepared two kinds of tetrasaccharides (N-acetyllactosamine and N,N-diacetyllactosamine terminated) by multi-step chemo-enzymatic synthesis utilizing recombinant glycosyltransferases. Subsequent conjugation of these glycans to lysine groups of bovine serum albumin via squaric acid diethyl ester yielded a set of 22 different neo-glycoproteins with tuned ligand density. The neo-glycoproteins were analyzed by biochemical and chromatographic methods proving various modification degrees. The neo-glycoproteins were used for binding and inhibition studies with human galectin-3 showing high affinity. Binding strength and inhibition potency are closely related to modification density and show binding enhancement by multivalent ligand presentation. At galectin-3 concentrations comparable to serum levels of cancer patients, we detect the highest avidities. Selectivity of N,N-diacetyllactosamine terminated structures towards galectin-3 in comparison to galectin-1 is demonstrated. Moreover, we also see strong inhibitory potency of our scaffolds towards galectin-3 binding. These novel neo-glycoproteins may therefore serve as selective and strong galectin-3 ligands in cancer related biomedical research.
Galectins,β-galactoside binding proteins, function in several physiological and pathological processes. The further evaluation of these processes as well as possible applications of galectins in diagnosis and therapy has raised high scientific interest. Therefore, easy and reliable test systems are necessary. Here we present the simple and cost-efficient production of recombinant human galectins as fusion proteins with SNAP-tag and fluorescent proteins. These constructs show binding specificities and oligomerisation properties generally comparable to recombinant galectins. Their direct fluorescence signal was utilised by ELISA-type assay and flow cytometry analysis with human and ovine mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). Flow cytometry demonstrated glycan mediated binding of His6-SNAP-YFP-Gal- 3 to both MSC types, which was specifically inhibited by lactose. Moreover, directed immobilisation by SNAP-tag technology onto benzylguanine- activated sepharose was utilised to prepare galectin affinity columns for glycoprotein analysis and purification. The SNAPtag directed coupling yielded up to three-fold higher binding capacities for the glycoprotein standard asialofetuin compared to nondirected coupled galectin suggesting improved functionality following directed coupling.
Galectin-3 modulates cell adhesion and signaling events by specific binding and cross-linking galactoside containing carbohydrate ligands. Proteolytic cleavage by metalloproteinases yields in vivo N-terminally truncated galectin-3 still bearing the carbohydrate recognition domain. Truncated galectin-3 has been demonstrated to act in vivo as a negative inhibitor of galectin-3 due to higher affinity for carbohydrate ligands. We here present our studies on a series of 12 human galectin-3 protein constructs. Truncated galectin-3 (∆1-62 and ∆1-116) and fusions with SNAP-tag and/or yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) display altered binding efficiencies (ratio of maximum binding signal and apparent affinity constant Kd) to asialofetuin (ASF) in solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) binding assays. Galectin-3(Δ1-62) and full-length (native) galectin-3 have highest affinity to ASF in ELISA and SPR experiments, respectively, whereas galectin-3(Δ1-116) shows only weak binding. We demonstrate here for the first time that SNAP-tag and YFP fusions of galectin-3 and truncated galectin-3 proteins improve binding efficiencies to ASF. SNAP-tagged galectin-3, galectin-3(Δ1-62) and galectin-3(Δ1-116) are found with significant (3- to 6-fold) higher binding efficiencies in SPR when compared with native galectin-3. Fusion of truncated galectin-3 with YFP renders binding properties similar to native galectin-3, whereas in combination with SNAP-tag improved binding characteristics are obtained. Our results emphasize the importance of the N-terminal domain of human galectin-3 for ligand binding. Most importantly, in combination with fusion proteins suitable for the design of diagnostic and therapeutic tools binding properties can be beneficially tuned. The resulting novel protein tools may be advantageous for potential galectin-3 directed applications in tumor diagnostics and therapy.
Galectin inhibitor design is an emerging research field due to the involvement of galectins in cancer. Galectin-3, in particular, plays an important role in tumor progression. To generate inhibitors, modifications of the glycan structure can be introduced. Conjugation of hydrophobic compounds to saccharides has proven to be promising as increased binding of galectin-3 can be observed. In the present study, we report on neo-glycans carrying hydrophobic biotin as novel ligands for human galectin-3. We modified N-acetyllactosamine- and N,N-diacetyllactosamine-based tetrasaccharides at the C6-position of the terminal saccharide unit using selective enzymatic oxidation and subsequent chemical conjugation of biotinamidohexanoic acid hydrazide. These neo-glycans were much better bound by galectin-3 than the unmodified counterparts. High selectivity for galectin-3 over galectin-1 was also proven. We generated multivalent neo-glycoproteins by conjugation of neo-glycans to bovine serum albumin showing high affinity for galectin-3. Compared to non-biotinylated neo-glycoproteins, we achieved high binding levels of galectin-3 with a lesser amount of conjugated neo-glycans. Multivalent ligand presentation of neo-glycoproteins significantly increased the inhibitory potency towards galectin-3 binding to asialofetuin when compared to free monovalent glycans. Our findings show the positive impact of 6-biotinylation of tetrasaccharides on galectin-3 binding, which broadens the recent design approaches for producing high-affinity ligands.
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