Chemoenzymatic synthesis of bacterial nonulosonic acids and glycans Sialic acids are a family of wide-spread nonulosonic acids (alpha-keto acids with a nine-carbon backbone) in vertebrates and in some pathogenic bacteria. Bacteria also produce nonulosonic acids that have not been found in animals. These bacterium-specific nonulosonic acids have been used by bacteria as part of their capsular polysaccharides (CPSs) and lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) which are bacterial virulence factors and potential vaccine candidates. Structurally defined bacterial CPSs, LPSs, and the corresponding oligosaccharide repeating units are important probes to study their roles in bacterial infection and microbe-host interaction including their influence on host immune systems. These carbohydrates are attractive synthetic targets but pose significant synthetic challenges. In addition to bacterial specific nonulosonic acids, they may contain other monosaccharide building blocks that have not been found in mammals. The glycosidic linkages found in bacterial polysaccharides are also much more diverse than those in mammalian glycans. We propose to develop efficient chemoenzymatic methods to synthesize bacterial nonulosonic acids and their glycans as part of CPS and LPS oligosaccharides of pathogenic bacteria. These represent biologically important and synthetically challenging targets. In the current proposal duration, the focus will be on bacterial glycans containing legionaminic acid and their derivatives.
Three specific aims are: 1, Synthesize acceptors and monosaccharide chemoenzymatic synthons for one-pot multienzyme (OPME) glycosylation systems; 2, Identify and characterize candidate sugar-1-P kinases, UDP-sugar synthetases, and glycosyltransferases; and 3, Chemoenzymatic synthesis of bacterial polysaccharide repeating units containing legionaminic acid or derivatives. The enzymes identified and the monosaccharides designed are important tools and reagents for accessing synthetic challenging carbohydrates and glycoconjugates that are not limited to the targets described in the proposal. The oligosaccharides produced are essential probes for better understanding the important roles of bacterial polysaccharides. They are also candidates for synthesizing structurally defined carbohydrate-protein conjugate vaccines to combat bacterial infections.
Chemoenzymatic synthesis of bacterial nonulosonic acids and glycans The efficient chemoenzymatic methods developed in this proposal will allow the access of bacterial nonulosonic acids and glycans which are virulence factors of pathogenic bacteria. The glycans produced can be anti-bacteria vaccine candidates and essential probes to identify the corresponding antibodies and protein binders. Information will also be learned regarding biosynthesis of these important bacterial virulence factors and facilitate in the future development of inhibitors as potential antibiotics.