For the full paper by P. Bojarová, K. Slámová, K. Křenek, R. Gažák, N. Kulik, R. Ettrich, H. Pelantová, M. Kuzma, S. Riva, D. Adámek, K. Bezouška, and V. Křen, Charged Hexosaminides as New Substrates for β-N-Acetylhexosaminidase-Catalyzed Synthesis of Immunomodulatory Disaccharides (Adv. Synth. Catal. 2011, 353, 2409--2420; DOI: 10.1002/adsc.201100371), the authors have asked for the following corrigendum. This work is a structure-activity relationship study that investigated the influence of the nature and level of negative charge in carbohydrate substrates on the affinity of β-N-acetylhexosaminidases. Specifically, we described a thorough study on the ability of six C-6 modified β-N-acetylhexosaminides (aldehyde, uronate, 6-O-sulfate, 6-O-phosphate) to serve as substrates for cleavage and glycosylation by a library of β-N-acetylhexosaminidases from various sources. 1. We were able to synthesize four novel hitherto unknown 6-O-substituted p-nitrophenyl hexosamines as new, so far undescribed substrates of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase. 2. Detailed mechanistic study supported by the molecular modelling with β-N-acetylhexosaminidase from T. flavus demonstrated that this enzyme is able to accept (and transglycosylate) substrates bearing charged moiety at the position C-6. 3. All structures were fully characterized by NMR and MS. 4. New carbohydrate structures were found to be ligands of natural killer (NK) receptors NKR-P1 (rat) and CD69 (human) (Table 2 and section “Immunoactivity of Prepared Compounds”). Unfortunately, Professor Kren and the other authors have learned recently that the author responsible for the immunological experiments – Prof. Karel Bezouška – has been fabricating the results and also fraudulently manipulating with experimental material from collaborating laboratories. Based on the findings of the joint ethical committee of the Institute of Microbiology, Acad. Sci. of the Czech Republic and Charles University in Prague and based on the reevaluation experiments performed by us, we consider all the data on the binding of saccharides to the NKR-P1 and CD69 receptors to be erroneous.1 Thus we still firmly stand by the data under highlights 1--3, but can no longer claim that the results from the NK receptors under highlight 4 are correct. [1] D. Rozbeský, J. Krejzová, K. Křenek, J. Prchal, R. Hrabal, M. Kožíšek, L. Weignerová, M. Fiore, P. Dumy, O. Renaudet, V. Křen, Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2014, 15, 1271--1283.
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