A novel strategy to generate biologically active neo-glycosaminoglycan conjugates

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Abstract

Heparin and heparan sulfate are structurally related polysaccharides with a variety of biological effects/functions. Most of these effects are due to interactions, of varying specificity, between the negatively charged polysaccharide chains and proteins. While such interactions generally involve a single saccharide domain of decasaccharide size or less, ternary complexes of two protein molecules binding to separate domains on a single polysaccharide chain are known to occur. To facilitate studies on domain organization and its importance for biological function a strategy was developed to chemically conjugate defined heparin oligomers in linear and chemoselective fashion. The procedure requires that the oligosaccharide to provide the reducing-terminal domain of the conjugate is generated by lyase degradation of a parent polysaccharide, whereas the nonreducing-terminal domain is obtained through deaminative cleavage with nitrous acid. The applicability of the method was demonstrated by constructing a conjugate composed of two heparin 12-mers, of which the reducing-terminal component contained the antithrombin-binding region, whereas the nonreducing-terminal domain did not. Contrary to any of the unconjugated oligomers, the product was found to efficiently promote the inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin.

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Rong, J., Nordling, K., Björk, I., & Lindahl, U. (1999). A novel strategy to generate biologically active neo-glycosaminoglycan conjugates. Glycobiology, 9(12), 1331–1336. https://doi.org/10.1093/glycob/9.12.1331

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