4.5 Article

Assessing the inhibitory potency of galectin ligands identified from combinatorial (glyco)peptide libraries using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy

Journal

ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 378, Issue 2, Pages 190-196

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2008.04.023

Keywords

galectin; one-bead-one-compound (glyco)peptide; library; surface plasmon resonance; glycomimetic; glycopeptide; lectin

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Combinatorial (glyco)peptide libraries offer the possibility to define effective inhibitors of protein (lectin)-glycan interactions. If a (glyco)peptide surpasses the inhibitory potency of the free sugar, then the new peptide-lectin contacts underlying the affinity enhancement may guide further rational drug design. Focusing on the adhesion/growth regulatory human galectins 1 and 3, a screening of three combinatorial solid-phase (glyco)peptide libraries, containing Gal(beta 1-O)Thr, Gal(P1-S)Cys/Gal(beta 1-N)Asn, and Lac(beta 1-O)Thr, with the fluorescently labeled lectins had led to a series of lead compounds. To define the inhibitory potency of a selection of resynthesized (glyco)peptides systematically, a surface plasmon resonance-based inhibition assay with immobilized asialofetuin was set up. (Glyco)Peptides with up to 66-fold potency relative to free lactose as inhibitor were characterized. The presence of lactose in the most effective glycopeptides indicated the presence of affinity-enhancing peptide-lectin contacts. In addition to drug design, they may be helpful for fine-structural analysis of the binding sites. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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