Carbohydrate microarrays

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Abstract

Carbohydrates, like nucleic acids and proteins, are essential biological molecules. Owing to their intrinsic physicochemical properties, carbohydrates are capable of generating structural diversity in a multitude of ways and are prominently displayed on the surfaces of cell membranes or on the exposed regions of macromolecules. Recent studies highlight that carbohydrate moieties are critical for molecular recognition, cell-cell interactions, and cell signaling in many physiological and pathological processes, and for biocommunication between microbes and host species. concepts of sugar chain diversity, glyco-epitope recognition, and the evolving area of glyco-epitomics and biomarker discovery are discussed. Two complementary technologies, carbohydrate antigen arrays and photogenerated glyco-chips, serve as models to illustrate how to apply carbohydrate microarrays to address biomedical questions.

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Wang, D., Tang, J., Wolfinger, R. D., & Carroll, G. T. (2015). Carbohydrate microarrays. In Polysaccharides: Bioactivity and Biotechnology (pp. 1441–1466). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16298-0_35

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