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1.
J Neurochem ; 164(4): 481-498, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36504018

ABSTRACT

Metabolic glycoengineering (MGE) has been developed to visualize carbohydrates on live cells. The method allows the fluorescent labeling of sialic acid (Sia) sugar residues on neuronal plasma membranes. For instance, the efficiency of glycosylation along neurite membranes has been characterized as cell health measure in neurotoxicology. Using human dopaminergic neurons as model system, we asked here, whether it was possible to separately label diverse classes of biomolecules and to visualize them selectively on cells. Several approaches suggest that a large proportion of Sia rather incorporated in non-protein components of cell membranes than into glycoproteins. We made use here of deoxymannojirimycin (dMM), a non-toxic inhibitor of protein glycosylation, and of N-butyl-deoxynojirimycin (NBdNM) a well-tolerated inhibitor of lipid glycosylation, to develop a method of differential labeling of sialylated membrane lipids (lipid-Sia) or sialylated N-glycosylated proteins (protein-Sia) on live neurons. The time resolution at which Sia modification of lipids/proteins was observable was in the range of few hours. The approach was then extended to several other cell types. Using this technique of target-specific MGE, we found that in dopaminergic or sensory neurons >60% of Sia is lipid bound, and thus polysialic acid-neural cell adhesion molecule (PSA-NCAM) cannot be considered the major sialylated membrane component. Different from neurons, most Sia was bound to protein in HepG2 hepatoma cells or in neural crest cells. Thus, our method allows visualization of cell-specific sialylation processes for separate classes of membrane constituents.


Subject(s)
N-Acetylneuraminic Acid , Sialic Acids , Humans , Sialic Acids/metabolism , N-Acetylneuraminic Acid/metabolism , Glycoproteins/metabolism , Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules/metabolism , Glycosylation , Lipids
2.
Chembiochem ; 22(7): 1243-1251, 2021 04 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33180370

ABSTRACT

Metabolic glycoengineering (MGE) is an established method to incorporate chemical reporter groups into cellular glycans for subsequent bioorthogonal labeling. The method has found broad application for the visualization and isolation of glycans allowing their biological roles to be probed. Furthermore, targeting of drugs to cancer cells that present high concentrations of sialic acids on their surface is an attractive approach. We report the application of a labeling reaction using 1,2-diamino-4,5-methylenedioxybenzene for the quantification of sialic acid derivates after MGE with various azide- and alkene-modified ManNAc, GlcNAc, and GalNAc derivatives. We followed the time course of sialic acid production and were able to detect sialic acids modified with the chemical reporter group - not only after addition of ManNAc derivatives to the cell culture. A cyclopropane-modified ManNAc derivative, being a model for the corresponding cyclopropene analog, which undergoes fast inverse-electron-demand Diels-Alder reactions with 1,2,4,5-tetrazines, resulted in the highest incorporation efficiency. Furthermore, we investigated whether feeding the cells with natural and unnatural ManNAc derivative results in increased levels of sialic acids and found that this is strongly dependent on the investigated cell type and cell fraction. For HEK 293T cells, a strong increase in free sialic acids in the cell interior was found, whereas cell-surface sialic acid levels are only moderately increased.


Subject(s)
Alkenes/chemistry , Azides/chemistry , Hexosamines/chemistry , Metabolic Engineering , N-Acetylneuraminic Acid/analysis , Cycloaddition Reaction , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , HEK293 Cells , HeLa Cells , Humans , Microscopy, Fluorescence
3.
Arch Toxicol ; 94(2): 449-467, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31828357

ABSTRACT

While there are many methods to quantify the synthesis, localization, and pool sizes of proteins and DNA during physiological responses and toxicological stress, only few approaches allow following the fate of carbohydrates. One of them is metabolic glycoengineering (MGE), which makes use of chemically modified sugars (CMS) that enter the cellular biosynthesis pathways leading to glycoproteins and glycolipids. The CMS can subsequently be coupled (via bio-orthogonal chemical reactions) to tags that are quantifiable by microscopic imaging. We asked here, whether MGE can be used in a quantitative and time-resolved way to study neuronal glycoprotein synthesis and its impairment. We focused on the detection of sialic acid (Sia), by feeding human neurons the biosynthetic precursor N-acetyl-mannosamine, modified by an azide tag. Using this system, we identified non-toxic conditions that allowed live cell labeling with high spatial and temporal resolution, as well as the quantification of cell surface Sia. Using combinations of immunostaining, chromatography, and western blotting, we quantified the percentage of cellular label incorporation and effects on glycoproteins such as polysialylated neural cell adhesion molecule. A specific imaging algorithm was used to quantify Sia incorporation into neuronal projections, as potential measure of complex cell function in toxicological studies. When various toxicants were studied, we identified a subgroup (mitochondrial respiration inhibitors) that affected neurite glycan levels several hours before any other viability parameter was affected. The MGE-based neurotoxicity assay, thus allowed the identification of subtle impairments of neurochemical function with very high sensitivity.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/metabolism , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical/methods , Molecular Biology/methods , N-Acetylneuraminic Acid/metabolism , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/pathology , Bortezomib/pharmacology , Cell Line , Glycoconjugates/chemistry , Glycoconjugates/metabolism , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Hexosamines/chemistry , Hexosamines/metabolism , Hexosamines/pharmacology , Humans , Neurites/chemistry , Neurites/metabolism , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/metabolism , Neurons/pathology , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/metabolism , Tunicamycin/pharmacology
4.
Chembiochem ; 20(2): 166-171, 2019 01 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30499611

ABSTRACT

Bioorthogonal labeling of multiple biomolecules is of current interest in chemical biology. Metabolic glycoengineering (MGE) has been shown to be an appropriate approach to visualizing carbohydrates. Here, we report that the nitrile imine-alkene cycloaddition (photoclick reaction) is a suitable ligation reaction in MGE. Using a mannosamine derivative with an acrylamide reporter group that is efficiently metabolized by cells and that quickly reacts in the photoclick reaction, we labeled sialic acids on the surface of living cells. Screening of several alkenes showed that a previously reported carbamate-linked methylcyclopropene reporter that is well suited for the inverse-electron-demand Diels-Alder (DAinv ) reaction has a surprisingly low reactivity in the photoclick reaction. Thus, for the first time, we were able to triply label glycans by a combination of DAinv , photoclick, and copper-free click chemistry.


Subject(s)
Polysaccharides/chemistry , Alkenes/chemistry , Click Chemistry , Cycloaddition Reaction , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Imines/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Nitriles/chemistry , Photochemical Processes
5.
Chembiochem ; 18(13): 1242-1250, 2017 07 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28318083

ABSTRACT

Sialic acids play an important role in numerous cell adhesion processes, and sialylation levels are known to be altered under certain pathogenic conditions, such as cancer. Metabolic glycoengineering with mannosamine derivatives is a convenient way to introduce non-natural chemical reporter groups into sialylated glycoconjugates, offering the opportunity to label sialic acids by using bioorthogonal ligation chemistry. The labeling intensity depends not only on the rate of the ligation reaction but also on the extent to which the natural sialic acids are replaced by the modified ones; that is, the incorporation efficiency. Here, we present a comparative study of eight mannosamine derivatives featuring terminal alkenes as chemical reporter groups that can be labeled by an inverse-electron-demand Diels-Alder (DAinv) reaction. The derivatives differed in chain length as well as the type of linkage (carbamates, amides, and a urea) that connects the terminal alkene to the sugar. As a general trend, increasing chain lengths resulted in higher DAinv reactivity and, at the same time, reduced incorporation efficiency. Carbamates were better accepted than amides with the same chain length; nevertheless, the latter resulted in more intense cell-surface staining, visible by live-cell fluorescence microscopy. A urea derivative was also shown to be accepted.


Subject(s)
Glycoconjugates/chemistry , Hexosamines/chemistry , Sialic Acids/chemistry , Staining and Labeling/methods , Alkenes/chemistry , Amides/chemistry , Carbamates/chemistry , Carbohydrate Conformation , Carbohydrate Sequence , Cycloaddition Reaction , Glycoconjugates/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Hexosamines/metabolism , Humans , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Sialic Acids/metabolism , Urea/chemistry
6.
Chembiochem ; 17(14): 1374-83, 2016 07 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27147502

ABSTRACT

Metabolic glycoengineering (MGE) allows the introduction of unnaturally modified carbohydrates into cellular glycans and their visualization through bioorthogonal ligation. Alkenes, for example, have been used as reporters that can react through inverse-electron-demand Diels-Alder cycloaddition with tetrazines. Earlier, norbornenes were shown to be suitable dienophiles; however, they had not previously been applied for MGE. We synthesized two norbornene-modified mannosamine derivatives that differ in the stereochemistry at the norbornene (exo/endo linkage). Kinetic investigations revealed that the exo derivative reacts more than twice as rapidly as the endo derivative. Through derivatization with 1,2-diamino-4,5-methylenedioxybenzene (DMB) we confirmed that both derivatives are accepted by cells and incorporated after conversion to a sialic acid. In further MGE experiments the incorporated sugars were ligated to a fluorophore and visualized through confocal fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry.


Subject(s)
Bioengineering/methods , Hexosamines/chemistry , Cell Membrane Permeability , Flow Cytometry , HEK293 Cells , Hexosamines/pharmacokinetics , Humans , Kinetics , Microscopy, Confocal , N-Acetylneuraminic Acid/pharmacokinetics , Norbornanes/chemistry , Phenylenediamines/chemistry , Polysaccharides/chemistry , Polysaccharides/pharmacokinetics , Stereoisomerism
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