Myriam
Bergmann
a,
Gaëlle
Michaud
a,
Ricardo
Visini
a,
Xian
Jin
a,
Emilie
Gillon
b,
Achim
Stocker
a,
Anne
Imberty
b,
Tamis
Darbre
*a and
Jean-Louis
Reymond
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Berne, Freiestrasse 3, 3012 Berne, Switzerland. E-mail: jean-louis.reymond@dcb.unibe.ch; Fax: +41 31 631 8057
bCentre de Recherches sur les Macromolécules Végétales, UPR5301, CNRS and Université Grenoble Alpes, 601 rue de la Chimie, F38041 Grenoble, France
First published on 21st September 2015
The galactose specific lectin LecA partly mediates the formation of antibiotic resistant biofilms by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an opportunistic pathogen causing lethal airways infections in immunocompromised and cystic fibrosis patients, suggesting that preventing LecA binding to natural saccharides might provide new opportunities for treatment. Here 8-fold (G3) and 16-fold (G4) galactosylated analogs of GalAG2, a tetravalent G2 glycopeptide dendrimer LecA ligand and P. aeruginosa biofilm inhibitor, were obtained by convergent chloroacetyl thioether (ClAc) ligation between 4-fold or 8-fold chloroacetylated dendrimer cores and digalactosylated dendritic arms. Hemagglutination inhibition, isothermal titration calorimetry and biofilm inhibition assays showed that G3 dendrimers bind LecA slightly better than their parent G2 dendrimers and induce complete biofilm inhibition and dispersal of P. aeruginosa biofilms, while G4 dendrimers show reduced binding and no biofilm inhibition. A binding model accounting for the observed saturation of glycopeptide dendrimer galactosyl groups and LecA binding sites is proposed based on the crystal structure of a G3 dendrimer LecA complex.
Following this hypothesis ligands of LecA,8 LecB,8 or both9 have been reported featuring various monovalent or multivalent glycosides displayed on a multivalent scaffold.10 However only very few examples have been reported to actually interfere with Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm formation.11 In particular we recently reported glycopeptide dendrimers displaying four α-L-C-fucoside groups (FD2: (Fuc-α-CH2CO-Lys-Pro-Leu)4(Lys-Phe-Lys-Ile)2Lys-His-Ile-NH2)12 or analogs with four galactoside groups (GalAG2: (Gal-β-OC6H4CO-Lys-Pro-Leu)4(Lys-Phe-Lys-Ile)2Lys-His-Ile-NH2; GalBG2: (Gal-β-S CH2CH2CO-Lys-Pro-Leu)4(Lys-Phe-Lys-Ile)2Lys-His-Ile-NH2)13 at the end of a common second generation (G2) peptide dendrimer scaffold.14 These dendrimers bound tightly to their respective lectin, and inhibited the formation and induced partial dispersion of P. aeruginosa biofilms, representing an interesting example of bioactive synthetic dendrimers.15
Tight lectin binding and biofilm inhibition by these tetravalent G2 dendrimers depended on a multivalency effect since the lower generation analogs (G0 and G1) were essentially inactive.16 In the case of the GalAG2 lectin binding was enhanced by a specific CH–π interaction between the (ε)-CH of His50 on LecA and the aromatic ring of the GalA aglycone leading to further binding interactions between the terminal tripeptide arm of the dendrimer and LecA, however optimization of the amino acid sequence of this tripeptide only resulted in modest activity improvements.17 Considering that many of the reported high affinity multivalent glycosidic ligands for lectins feature an 8-fold or higher multivalency, we asked the question whether the binding affinity and biological activity of dendrimers GalAG2 and GalBG2 might be increased in higher valency analogs as observed in other series of tight binding LecA ligands.8 Various G3 and G4 analogs of GalAG2 and GalBG2 were prepared using the multiple chloroacetyl cysteine (ClAc) thioether ligation as the key step.18 Hemagglutination inhibition, isothermal titration calorimetry and biofilm inhibition assays are reported that show that G3 dendrimers bind LecA slightly better than their parent G2 dendrimers and induce complete biofilm inhibition and dispersal of P. aeruginosa biofilms, while G4 dendrimers have reduced binding and no biofilm inhibition. A binding model accounting for the observed saturation of glycopeptide dendrimer galactosyl groups and LecA binding sites is proposed based on a crystal structure of a G3 dendrimer LecA complex.
Fig. 1 Convergent synthesis and structural formula of the octavalent G3 glycopeptide dendrimer GalAxG3 with the corresponding sequence notation. Sequences are written with N-terminus at left and C-terminus at right, the C-terminus of the peptide is carboxamide (CONH2). One letter codes are used for standard amino acids, the branching diamino acid lysine is in italics and extended on both amino groups, x = –S–CH2–CO–. The detailed structure of the terminal galactosides abbreviated GalA and GalB in the abbreviated sequence notation of the dendrimers used in Table 1 and 2 are shown at top right. Conditions: (a) SPPS: Fmoc deprotection with piperidine/DMF 1:4 (v/v), 2 × 15 min; amino acid coupling (3 eq. Fmoc-aa-OH, 3 eq. PyBOP, 5 eq. DIEA in NMP), 2–4 hours; carbohydrate coupling: 4 eq. Ac4GalA-OH, 3 eq. HCTU, 5 eq. DIPEA in NMP, overnight; (b) deacetylation: MeOH/25% NH3/H2O (8:1:1, v/v/v); (c) cleavage: TFA/TIS/H2O (95:2.5:2.5, v/v/v); (d) RP-HPLC purification; (e) ClAc ligation: ClAcG2 (1 eq.), GalAG1-Cys (6 eq.), KI (20 eq.) DIPEA (55 eq.) in DMF/H2O (1:1, v/v), RT, overnight under an argon atmosphere. |
SPPS was first used to prepare a G1 glycopeptide dendrimer featuring the N-terminal dipeptide LysPro of GalAG2 known to engage in direct contact with the lectin, which was acylated at its two N-termini with either 4-carboxyphenyl-β-galactoside to yield GalAG1-Cys or carboxypropyl-β-thiogalactoside to yield GalBG1-Cys. The carbohydrate building block coupling step was not problematic at the G1 level and both products were obtained in good yield after purification by preparative HPLC. The amino acid sequence of GalAG2 was then used to design the 2-fold, 4-fold and 8-fold chloroacetylated core dendrimers ClAcG1, ClAcG2 and ClAcG3 consisting of dipeptide branches. The chloroacetylated dendrimer cores ClAcPSG2 and ClAcPSG3 were also prepared since they were found previously to give high yields in ClAc ligation reactions.18 The isolated yields of these various chloroacetylated core dendrimers after SPPS and HPLC purification were above 25% for G1 and G2, but only 3–5% for G3 cores, reflecting the generally more difficult synthesis of G3 peptide dendrimers (Table 1).
Name | Sequencea | MS calc./obs.b | Yield mgc (%) |
---|---|---|---|
a Sequence notation for peptide dendrimers using single letter amino acid codes for L-amino acids and indicating the branching lysine in italics. See Fig. 1 for the correspondence between sequence notation and complete structural formula, illustrated for dendrimer GalAxG3. Further abbreviations: ClAc = ClCH2CO–, x = –CH2SCH2CO–, GalA = 4-(β-galactosyloxy)benzoyl, GalB = (β-galactosyl)SCH2CH2CO, the peptide C-terminus is carboxamide (CONH2). b ESI+ or MALDI. c Yields are for purified compounds after SPPS (upper part) or ClAc ligation (lower part) and preparative HPLC. | |||
Components from SPPS | |||
GalAG1-Cys | (GalA-KP)2KIC | 1376.6/1377 | 63 (41.6%) |
GalBG1-Cys | (GalB-KP)2KIC | 1312.6/1312.6 | 57 (39.5%) |
ClAcG1 | (ClAc-KI)2KHI | 1031.1/1030 | 41.4 (36.55%) |
ClAcG2 | (ClAc-KP)4(KKI)2KHI | 2341.6/2341 | 64 (25%) |
ClAcG3 | (ClAc-KP)8(KLF)4(KKI)2KHI | 5102.7/5102 | 19.3 (3.4%) |
ClAcPSG2 | (ClAc-PS)4(KPS)2KPS | 1996.8/1996.9 | 66 (30%) |
ClAcPSG3 | (ClAc-PS)8(KPS)4(KPS)2KPS | 4289/4290 | 25 (5%) |
GalAPSG2 | (GalA-KPL)4(KPS)2KPS | 3437.9/3478 | 26.4 (6%) |
Dendrimers prepared by ClAc ligation | |||
GalAxG2 | (GalA-KP)4(KICxKI)2KHI | 3711.3/3711 | 6.9 (64%) |
GalAxG3 | (GalA-KP)8(KICxKP)4(KKI)2KHI | 7702/7701 | 7.3 (70%) |
GalAxG4 | (GalA-KP)16(KICxKP)8(KLF)4(KKI)2KHI | 15823.6/15825 | 1.1 (12%) |
GalAxPSG3 | (GalA-KP)8(KICxPS)4(KPS)2KPS | 7357.3/7358 | 9.7 (74.5%) |
GalAxPSG4 | (GalA-KP)16(KICxPS)8(KPS)4(KPS)2KPS | 15009.9/15010.6 | 9.1 (80.8%) |
GalBxG2 | (GalB-KP)4(KICxKI)2KHI | 3583.4/3582.7 | 6.7 (64.5%) |
GalBxG3 | (GalB-KP)8(KICxKP)4(KKI)2KHI | 7446.2/7445 | 6.2 (64%) |
The ClAc ligation was then performed to append to different dendrimer cores multiple copies of the GalAG1-Cys dendrimer bearing a phenyl-β-galactoside LecA ligand. Dendrimers ClAcG1 and ClAcG2 were also ligated to GalBG1-Cys to obtain G2 and G3 analogs with a thiopropyl-β-galactoside endgroup. The ligation reactions generally proceeded cleanly and gave isolated yields in the range 64–80%, except for GalAxG4 which was obtained in only 12% yield due to a difficult purification process.
Ligand | Sequencea | Hemagglutination assayb | Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC)c | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n Gal | MIC μM | r.p./n | N | % bnd Gal | ΔH [kcal mol−1] | −TΔS | ΔG | K D [nM] | r.p./nGal | ||
a Sequence notation for peptide dendrimers using single letter amino acid codes for L-amino acids and indicating the branching lysine in italics. See Fig. 1 for the correspondence between sequence notation and complete structural formula, illustrated for dendrimer GalAxG3. Further abbreviations: GalA = 4-(β-galactosyloxy)benzoyl, GAlB = (β-galactosyl)SCH2CH2CO, x = –CH2SCH2CO–, the peptide C-terminus is carboxamide (CONH2). b Minimal hemagglutination inhibition concentrations (MIC) were determined in two different series with the MIC for galactose being 42 mM or 3.125 mM, marked with *, nGal is the number of galactosyl groups per compound, r.p./n is the relative potency per galactosyl group relative to free galactose as a reference: MIC(galactose)/(n × MIC(compound)), r.p./nGalA or B is the relative potency per galactosyl group relative to GalAG0 or GalBG0 as a reference: MIC(GalAG0 or GalBG0)/(n × MIC(compound)). c Thermodynamic parameters and dissociation constants KD are reported as an average of two independent runs from ITC in 20 mM Tris, 100 mM NaCl, 100 μM CaCl2, pH = 7.5. Titration concentrations (ligand/LecA) are the following: NPG (3 mM/0.3 mM), GalAG0 (0.5 mM/0.0516 mM), GalAG1 (0.25 mM/0.0486 mM), GalAG2 (0.03 mM/0.018 mM), GalAxG2 (0.03 mM/0.016 mM), GalAxG3 (0.015 mM/0.017 mM), GalAxG3PS (0.015 mM/0.0146 mM), GalAxG4PS (0.01 mM/0.019 mM), GalBG0 (1.0 mM/0.091 mM), GalBG1 (0.25 mM/0.049 mM), GalBG2 (0.03 mM/0.018 mM), GalBxG2 (0.03 mM/0.021 mM), GalBxG3 (0.015 mM/0.013 mM). N = stoichiometry value in the ligand/galactose binding site on LecA. r.p./nGal = relative potency per galactosyl group relative to the parent monovalent ligand GalAG0 or GalBG0. | |||||||||||
D-Galactose | 1 | 42000 (3125*) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | |
NPG | p-Nitrophenyl-β-galactoside | 1 | — | — | 0.91 ± 0.03 | — | −10.6 ± 0.5 | 4.04 | 6.53 | 16000 ± 500 | — |
IPTG | Isopropyl-β-thiogalactoside | 1 | 10400 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
GalAG0 | (GalA-KPL) | 1 | 80* | 1 | 0.65 ± 0.02 | 100 | −17.8 ± 0.3 | 10.2 | −7.5 | 2960 ± 50 | 1 |
GalAG1 | (GalA-KPL)2KHI | 2 | 31* | 1.3 | 0.302 ± 0.003 | 93 | −29 ± 0.5 | 19.3 | −9.7 | 83 ± 12 | 18 |
GalAG2 | (GalA-KPL)4(KFKI)2KHI | 4 | 0.78* | 26 | 0.136 ± 0.001 | 84 | −69 ± 1.1 | 57 | −11.7 | 2.5 ± 0.1 | 296 |
GalAxG2 | (GalA-KP)4(KICxKI)2KHI | 4 | 8.3 | 31 | 0.16 ± 0.009 | 98 | −54 ± 1 | 43 | −11.1 | 6.9 ± 1.4 | 107 |
GalAxG3 | (GalA-KP)8(KICxKP)4(KKI)2KHI | 8 | 1.04 | 125 | 0.064 ± 0.01 | 79 | −115 ± 8 | 103.0 | −11.7 | 2.5 ± 0.2 | 148 |
GalAxG4 | (GalAKP)16(KICxKP)8(KLF)4(KKI)2KHI | 16 | 1.28 | 50 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
GAlAPSG2 | (GalA-KPL)4(KPS)2KPS | 4 | 0.78 | 40 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
GalAxPSG3 | (GalA-KP)8(KICxPS)4(KPS)2KPS | 8 | 0.35 | 375 | 0.096 ± 0.001 | >100 | −92 ± 0.5 | 81 | −11.4 | 4.2 ± 0.2 | 88 |
GalAxPSG4 | (GalAKP)16(KICxPS)8(KPS)4(KPS)2KPS | 16 | 0.14 | 475 | 0.033 ± 0.001 | 41 | −217 ± 17 | 206 | −11.5 | 3.4 ± 0.4 | 54 |
GalBG0 | (GalB-KPL) | 1 | 2500* | 1 | 0.71 ± 0.01 | 100 | −14 ± 0.04 | 7.8 | −6.0 | 37000 ± 800 | 1 |
GalBG1 | (GalB-KPL)2KHI | 2 | 630* | 1.9 | 0.37 ± 0.02 | >100 | −20 ± 0.1 | 12 | −8.2 | 1060 ± 160 | 18 |
GalBG2 | (GalB-KPL)4(KFKI)2KHI | 4 | 125* | 4.8 | 0.18 ± 0.02 | >100 | −43 ± 1 | 33 | −10.1 | 40 ± 1 | 230 |
GalBxG2 | (GalB-KP)4(KICxKI)2KHI | 4 | 125* | 4.8 | 0.14 ± 0.001 | 79 | −47 ± 6 | 37 | −11.2 | 33 ± 25 | 280 |
GalBxG3 | (GalB-KP)8(KICxKP)4(KKI)2KHI | 8 | 37.5* | 8.3 | 0.08 ± 0.01 | 90 | −90 ± 9 | 79 | −11.4 | 5.9 ± 2 | 785 |
In the phenyl-galactoside (GalA) series there was no significant increase in r.p./nGal in the divalent dendrimer GalAG1, but the tetravalent dendrimer GalAG2 was 26-fold stronger than GalAG0 on a per galactose basis. A comparable multivalency effect was obtained with the tetravalent ClAc analog GalAxG2 (r.p./nGal = 31), showing that the modification of the peptide dendrimer backbone performed to enable the convergent ClAc ligation did not influence hemagglutination inhibition significantly. Increasing the dendrimer size to octavalency resulted in a more modest, 4-fold increase in relative potency per galactosyl endgroup with GalAxG3 (r.p./nGal = 125), respectively a 14-fold increase in its analog GalAxPSG3 (r.p./nGal = 375). However there was no further increase in relative potency at the G4 level, with the 16-valent GalAxG4 (r.p./nGal = 50) showing a 2.5-fold drop and GalAxPSG4 (r.p./nGal = 475) a 1.3-fold increase in potency relative to the corresponding G3 dendrimers. In the thiopropyl-galactoside (GalB) series multivalency effects in hemagglutination inhibition were much weaker, with r.p./nGal values increasing only up to 8-fold in GalBxG3.
In each series the multivalency effect on binding was quantified by the relative potency of binding per galactosyl endgroup (r.p./nGal), which was calculated from the ratio between the KD of the reference monovalent glycotripeptide ligand GalAG0 or GalBG0 and the KD of the multivalent dendrimer. In the GalA series the relative potency increase in the G0/G1/G2 series (1/18/296) was much stronger than that observed in the hemagglutination assay (1/1.3/26). A further 1.4-fold increase in relative potency occurred in the homologous ClAc synthesis series GalAxG2/GalAxG3 (107/148), although both compounds were less potent than the parent GalAG2 dendrimer. Further generation increase was detrimental to binding, as evidenced by a relative potency decrease by 1.6-fold in the sequence GalAxPSG3/GalAxPSG4 (88/54). In the GalB series the relative potency increase in the G0/G1/G2 series (1/18/230) was comparable to that observed with the GalA series, in particular with a 13-fold increase in relative potency when moving from the divalent G1 dendrimer to the tetravalent G2 dendrimer, which was comparable to the 16-fold increase observed in the GalA series. As for the GalA series the gain in relative potency was much smaller between the tetravalent G2 and octavalent G3 GalB type dendrimers and amounted to only 2.8-fold (280/785).
Taken together, the ITC data confirmed the hemagglutination inhibition assays in showing that, while a very strong multivalency effect occurred at the level of the tetravalent G2 dendrimers, only a relatively modest increase in relative potency per galactosyl endgroup (1.4 to 4-fold) was possible by moving to higher multivalency dendrimers. It should be noted that ITC might not be able to measure KD values below 1 nM and might therefore obscure an increase in potency in the relatively tight binding GalA series. Nevertheless this uncertainly should not affect the results in the weaker binding GalB series reaching KD = 5.9 nM for GalBxG3 reflecting a 2.8-fold increase in relative potency per galactosyl group compared to its G2 analog.
The results are reported as minimal biofilm inhibition concentration (MBIC), which is the lowest concentration inducing complete biofilm inhibition (Table 3). In addition to biofilm inhibition, the ability of the compound to disperse already established biofilms was tested at a fixed concentration of 50 μM by treating established biofilms with the compounds for 24 h, followed by quantification of the live attached cells as above. The monovalent glycosides D-galactose, isopropyl thiogalactoside (IPTG), GalAG0 and GalBG0 and dendrimers FD2, GalAG2 and GalBG2 were used as controls since their biofilm inhibition has been previously quantified using the steel coupon assay.5b,12b,13 In particular D-galactose was inactive and the monovalent glycosides were only very weakly active and showed partial biofilm inhibition or dispersal only at millimolar to molar concentrations, while FD2, GalAG2 and GalBG2 showed MBIC values of 20 μM (80 μM on a per carbohydrate basis).
Compound | n gala | MBICa | MBIC × nGalb | Biofilm dispersalc |
---|---|---|---|---|
a MBIC: minimal biofilm inhibition concentration. b MBIC corrected for the number of galactosyl groups. c Biofilm dispersal with 50 μM ligand. | ||||
D-Galactose | 1 | >450 mM | — | Inactive (100 mM) |
IPTG | 1 | >360 mM | — | 25% (100 mM) |
FD2 | 4 | 20 μM | 80 μM | 100% |
GalAG0 | 1 | >3 mM | — | 25% (0.5 mM) |
GalAG1 | 2 | 225 μM | 450 μM | n.d. |
GalAG2 | 4 | 20 μM | 80 μM | 50% |
GalAxG2 | 4 | 40 μM | 160 μM | Inactive |
GalAxG3 | 8 | 9 μM | 72 μM | 100% |
GalAxG4 | 16 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
GalAPSG2 | 4 | >45 μM | >180 μM | n.d. |
GalAxPSG3 | 8 | >45 μM | >360 μM | n.d. |
GalAxPSG4 | 16 | >45 μM | >720 μM | 45% |
GalBG0 | 1 | >1.35 mM | >2.6 mM | Inactive (0.25 mM) |
GalBG1 | 2 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
GalBG2 | 4 | 20 μM | 80 μM | 60% |
GalBxG2 | 4 | 60 μM | 240 μM | Inactive |
GalBxG3 | 8 | 13 μM | 104 μM | 100% |
G2 dendrimers GalAxG2 and GalBxG2 obtained by the convergent ClAc ligation approach had 2–3 fold higher MBIC values than their parent dendrimers GalAG2 and GalBG2, showing a slightly detrimental effect of the modified peptide backbone on the antibiofilm activity. Nevertheless the corresponding G3 dendrimers GalAxG3 and GalBxG3 showed good biofilm inhibition properties with MBIC ∼10 μM, which is comparable to the inhibition by GalAG2 and GalBG2 on a per galactose basis. These dendrimers were also very active in the biofilm dispersal assay. Dendrimer GalAxPSG4, which was the only G4 dendrimer obtained in sufficient yields to perform biofilm inhibition studies, did not show any antibiofilm activity, however the same was true for all dendrimers with a Pro-Ser independent of their size, indicating a sequence rather than a dendrimer generation effect.
These data showed that the positive dendritic effect on biofilm inhibition in the series G0 (monovalent, no activity), G1 (divalent, weak activity for GalA only), and G2 (tetravalent, strong activity in both GalA and GalB) did not extend to higher generations. Indeed the expansion to an octavalent, G3 dendrimer, although still beneficial for binding as observed in the hemagglutination and ITC experiments, did not induce a significant increase in biofilm inhibition, and expansion to G4 resulted in a loss of activity. These data clearly marked tetravalency of G2 dendrimers as the optimal multivalency in this system. Although this pattern paralleled that of the relative binding potency to LecA in these series, the lack of biofilm inhibition activity with dendrimers built around a Pro-Ser core despite their strong LecA binding showed that strong, multivalent LecA binding was necessary but not sufficient for biofilm inhibition.
After screening several complexes and conditions, good quality crystals of the complex GalAxPSG3·LecA were obtained by soaking crystals of LecA with the dendrimer, providing a structure at 1.9 Å resolution. In this structure LecA tetramers are arranged in a 3D checker-board lattice leaving large cavities available facing the galactose binding sites and which can be occupied by a macromolecular ligand (Fig. 2A). All galactose binding sites are indeed occupied by a phenyl-β-galactosyl ligand, which under the conditions used for crystallization must be part of the terminal arms of GalAxPSG3. The binding interactions at the level of the phenyl-β-galactosyl groups comprise all the interactions observed previously in other aromatic galactoside LecA complexes, including hydrogen-bonding interactions between several hydroxyl groups on galactose and residues H50, D100 and N107 on LecA, as well as the critical CH–π interaction between the C(ε)–H of His50 of LecA and the aromatic group of the phenyl galactoside (Fig. 2B).
Fig. 2 Crystal structure and molecular modeling of G3 dendrimer LecA interactions. A. Side view and top view of the 3D checker-board lattice of the GalAxPSG3. LecA complex in the crystal (PDB 5D21). One LecA tetramer (red) is shown surrounded by its eight neighbours making contact at each of the eight corners. B. Details of the visible electron density of GalAxPSG3 and dendrimer–lectin binding interactions. C. Snapshot of the MD simulation of a chelate bound GalAxG3·LecA complex. D. Snapshot of a chelate bound GalAxPSG3·LecA complex. E. Schematic representation of LecA crystal lattice bound to a G3 dendrimer. F. Schematic representation of an extensive G3 dendrimer·LecA lattice accounting for saturation of all galactosyl groups and galactose binding sites. |
No electron density is visible beyond the aromatic groups, indicating a disordered conformation of the dendrimer or a mixture of different bound states. The surface of LecA surrounding the galactose binding sites is almost entirely covered by crystal water molecules, implying that GalAxG3PS binds LecA exclusively via its phenyl-galactosyl groups and the visible binding interactions. The positive dendritic effect on binding affinity observed with GalAxG3PS and other G2 and G3 dendrimers in both hemagglutination and ITC (Table 3) can therefore only be understood in terms of a chelate binding mode in which two arms of the dendrimer bind to a pair of galactose binding sites on the same side of the LecA tetramer. In the context of the crystal structure the space available in the checker-board lattice of the crystal is in any case large enough to accommodate GalAxG3PS.
To test if chelate-bound structures might be possible we ran independent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of LecA (as the tetramer) in complex with GalAxG3 and GalAxPSG3 in a geometry compatible with the observed crystal structure. These complexes remained stable over more than 5 ns of MD simulations. In particular, the protein tetramer structure retained the initial conformation seen in the X-ray model, with a global Cα RMSD oscillating around 1.4 Å. Sampled structures show how the dendrimer core can arrange into a rather compact molten globule-like state, while single branches stretch out to accommodate their ends into the binding pockets of the two LecA subunits (Fig. 2C). The GalAxPSG3 dendrimer presents a more compact structure than GalAxG3 due to the large number of more rigid proline residues (Fig. 2D).
The above modeling studies suggest that G3 dendrimers bind LecA in a chelate bound mode with a pair of galactosyl groups combining with a pair of galactose binding sites on the same side of LecA. G3 dendrimers are clearly too small to bridge between the two pairs of galactose binding sites on opposite sides of the same tetramer. The crystal structure of the GalAxPSG3·LecA complex most likely corresponds to a 2:1 dendrimer/LecA tetramer stoichiometry engaging only a single pair of galactosyl groups per dendrimer (Fig. 2E). ITC data by contrast show that all galactoside groups engage in a binding interaction with LecA, which can only occur with the opposite 1:2 dendrimer/LecA stoichiometry. Such stoichiometry might occur in a cross-linked network accounting for the formation of precipitates during ITC with all higher generation dendrimers (Fig. 2F).
GalAG1-Cys (GalA-KP) 2 KIC was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.22 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (63 mg, 45.76 μmol, 42%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.257 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C63H97N11O21S [M + H]+: 1376.6, found 1376.6, [M + H]+/2688.6
GalBG1-Cys (GalB-KP) 2 KIC was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.22 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (57 mg, 43.43 μmol, 40%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.217 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C55H97N11O19S3 [M + H]+: 1312.6, found 1312, [M + H]+/2656.8
ClAcG1 (ClAc-KI) 2 KHI was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.22 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (41.4 mg, 40.18 μmol, 33%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 0.990 min (A/D 80/20 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C46H81Cl2N13O9 [M + H]+: 1031.1, found 1030.4, [M + H]+/2515.8; [M + H]+/3344.6
ClAcG2 (ClAc-KP) 4 (KKI) 2 KHI was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.22 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (64 mg, 27.34 μmol, 25%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.345 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C106H183Cl4N29O21 [M + H]+: 2341.6, found 2341.0.
ClAcG3 (ClAc-KP) 8 (KLF) 4 (KKI) 2 KHI was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.25 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (19.3 mg, 3.78 μmol, 3%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.647 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C242H391Cl8N57O45 [M + H]+: 5102.7, found 5102.
ClAcPSG2 (ClAc-PS) 4 (KPS) 2 KPS was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.22 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (66 mg, 33.07 μmol, 30%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.285 min (A/D 90/10 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C82H127Cl4N21O28 [M + H]+: 1996.8, found 1995.9, 2033.9 [M + K]+, 2056.4 [M + K + Na]+.
ClAcPSG3 (ClAc-PS) 8 (KPS) 4 (KPS) 2 KPS was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.22 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (25 mg, 5.83 μmol, 5%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.38 min (A/D 90/10 to 0/100 in 2.2 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C178H275Cl8N45O60 [M + H]+: 4289, found 4290 and several sodium and potassium adducts.
GalAPSG2 (GalA-KPL) 4 (KPS) 2 KPS was obtained from 500 mg resin (loading 0.25 mmol g−1) as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (26.4 mg, 7.68 μmol, 6%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 2.635 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 7.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C162H251N29O52 [M + H]+: 3437.89, found 3437.8. Calc. for [M + K]+: 3475.89, found 3975.7.
GalAxG2 (GalA-KP) 4 (KICxKI) 2 KHI was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (6.9 mg, 1.86 μmol, 68%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.944 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 4.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C172H273N35O51S2 [M + H]+: 3711.3, found 3711.0.
GalAxG3 (GalA-KP) 8 (KICxKP) 4 (KKI) 2 KHI was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (6.6 mg, 0.86 μmol, 67%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.799 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 4.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C358H567N73O105S4 [M + H]+: 7702, found 7701.0; [M + H] + adducts with trifluoroacetic acid (TFA).
GalAxG4 (GalA-KP) 16 (KICxKP) 8 (KLF) 4 (KKI) 2 KHI was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (1.1 mg, 0.07 μmol, 12%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 2.094 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 4.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C746H1159N145O213S8 [M + H]+: 15824, found 15825.
GalAxPSG3 (GalA-KP) 8 (KICxPS) 4 (KPS) 2 KPS was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (8.2 mg, 1.11 μmol, 74%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 2.519 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 7.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C334H511N65O112S4 [M + H]+: 7357.3, found 7358.0, [M + K]+ 7395.0
GalAxPSG4 (GalA-KP) 16 (KICxPS) 8 (KPS) 4 (KPS) 2 KPS was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (9.1 mg, 0.61 μmol, 81%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.878 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 4.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C682H1043N133O228S8 [M + H]+: 15010, found 15010.3.
GalBxG2 (GalB-KP) 4 (KICxKI) 2 KHI was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (5.2 mg, 1.45 μmol, 50%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.839 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 4.5 min, λ = 214 nm). HRMS (ESI+) calc. for C156H273N35O47S6 [M + H]+: 3583.4, found 3582.84.
GalBxG3 (GalB-KP) 8 (KICxKP) 4 (KKI) 2 KHI was obtained as a foamy white solid after preparative RP-HPLC (4.9 mg, 0.66 μmol, 51%). Analytical RP-UHPLC: tR = 1.784 min (A/D 100/0 to 0/100 in 4.5 min, λ = 214 nm). MS (ESI+) calc. for C326H567N73O97S12 [M + H]+: 7446, found 7445.0.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c5ob01682g |
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