Abstract

Carbodiimide-mediated coupling of p-aminophenyl glycosides to a naturally nonglycosylated enzyme yields a neoglycoenzyme. This compound combines inherent enzymatic activity with synthetically conferred ligand properties to lectins. Appropriate choice of the ligand allows custom-made synthesis to reliably detect various types of lectins. To exemplify practical applications of this class of compounds, glycosylated bacterial β-galactosidase has been employed to quantitate plant lectins, immobilized on plastic surfaces as well as on nitrocellulose. Competitive inhibition by specific sugar ascertained the dependence of binding on protein-carbohydrate interactions. In view of lectins as tools, a sandwich lectin-binding assay for high mannose-type glycoprotein detection has been modified to principally facilitate wide application to other lectin-reactive sugar chains by introducing the neoglycoenzyme. In addition to lectin determination in solid-phase assays, neoglycoenzymes allow one to glycohistochemically localize endogenous lectins in tissue prints and tissue sections with a minimum number of steps. This nonradioactive, rapid, sensitive, and convenient assay concept, based on conjugation of a ligand to an enzyme with maintenance of its receptor-binding activity, may find extended application beyond lectinology in receptor analysis.

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