Abstract

Core fucosylation and the bisecting N-acetylglucosamine residue are prominent natural substitutions of the N-glycan core. To address the issue of whether these two substituents can modulate ligand properties of complex-type biantennary N-glycans, we performed chemoenzymatic synthesis of the respective galactosylated and alpha2,3/6-sialylated N-glycans. Neoglycoproteins were then produced to determine these glycans' reactivities with sugar receptors in solid-phase assays and with tumor cells in vitro as well as their in vivo biodistribution profiles in mice. Slight protein-type-dependent changes were noted in lectin binding, including adhesion/growth-regulatory galectins as study objects, when the data were related to properties of N-glycans without or with only one core substituent. Monitoring binding in vitro revealed cell-type-dependent changes. They delimited the ligand activity of this glycan type from that of chains with un- and monosubstituted cores. A markedly prolonged serum half-life was conferred to the neoglycoprotein by the galactose-terminated N-glycan, which together with increased organ retention of all three neoglycoproteins underscores the conspicuous relevance for glycoengineering of pharmaproteins. The predominant presentation of the two branches in the disubstituted N-glycan as extended (alpha1,3-antenna) and backfolded (alpha1,6-antenna) forms, revealed by molecular dynamics simulations, can underlie the measured characteristics. These results obtained by a combined strategy further support the concept of viewing N-glycan core substitutions as non-random additions which exert a modulatory role on ligand properties. Moreover, our data inspire us to devise new, non-natural modifications to realize the full potential of glycoengineering for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes.

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