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Generating orthogonal glycosyltransferase and nucleotide sugar pairs as next-generation glycobiology tools

Anna Cioce, Stacy A. Malaker, Benjamin Schumann

2020Current Opinion in Chemical Biology46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Protein glycosylation fundamentally impacts biological processes. Nontemplated biosynthesis introduces unparalleled complexity into glycans that needs tools to understand their roles in physiology. The era of quantitative biology is a great opportunity to unravel these roles, especially by mass spectrometry glycoproteomics. However, with high sensitivity come stringent requirements on tool specificity. Bioorthogonal metabolic labeling reagents have been fundamental to studying the cell surface glycoproteome but typically enter a range of different glycans and are thus of limited specificity. Here, we discuss the generation of metabolic 'precision tools' to study particular subtypes of the glycome. A chemical biology tactic termed bump-and-hole engineering generates mutant glycosyltransferases that specifically accommodate bioorthogonal monosaccharides as an enabling technique of glycobiology. We review the groundbreaking discoveries that have led to applying the tactic in the living cell and the implications in the context of current developments in mass spectrometry glycoproteomics.

Topics & Concepts

GlycobiologyGlycomeGlycoproteomicsBioorthogonal chemistryGlycomicsComputational biologyContext (archaeology)GlycosyltransferaseGlycanGlycosylationBiologyNucleotide sugarBiochemistryChemistryGlycoproteinGeneClick chemistryCombinatorial chemistryPaleontologyGlycosylation and Glycoproteins ResearchCarbohydrate Chemistry and SynthesisUbiquitin and proteasome pathways
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