Issue 15, 1998

Chemical synthesis of globotriose and galabiose: relative stabilities of their complexes with Escherichia coli Shiga-like toxin-1 as determined by denaturation-titration with guanidinium chloride

Abstract

Globotriose [α-D-Gal-(1→4)-β-D-Gal-(1→4)-D-Glc] is the carbohydrate moiety of the globotriosyl ceramide (Gb3), also known as the germinal centre B-cell differentiation antigen CD77, a glycolipid present on the plasma membrane of certain mammalian cells. In Gb3, globotriose functions as the cell-surface receptor for Shiga toxin and for the Shiga-like toxins (verocytotoxins). Here we report the chemical synthesis of globotriose and the corresponding terminal disaccharide, galabiose [α-D-Gal-(1→4)-β-D-Gal]. Globotriose and galabiose are attached via a linker to CNBr-activated Sepharose to generate affinity matrices that permit the one-step purification of recombinant Shiga-like toxin-1 from crude E. coli homogenates. Toxin is released from either of the immobilised saccharides by elution with 6 M guanidinium chloride. After dilution of the denaturant, the released toxin had full catalytic activity. Denaturation-titration experiments show that the bound toxin is released from galabiose-Sepharose at 2.3 M guanidinium chloride, while its release from globotriose-Sepharose requires a higher concentration of 4.8 M. These results indicate that the glucose component of globotriose contributes ≈2.6 kcal mol–1 to the binding energy relative to galabiose.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1998, 2287-2294

Chemical synthesis of globotriose and galabiose: relative stabilities of their complexes with Escherichia coli Shiga-like toxin-1 as determined by denaturation-titration with guanidinium chloride

D. Müller, G. Vic, P. Critchley, D. H. G. Crout, N. Lea, L. Roberts and J. Michael Lord, J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1998, 2287 DOI: 10.1039/A801429I

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