Reck F, Meinjohanns E, Springer M, Wilkens R, Van Dorst J A, Paulsen H, Möller G, Brockhausen I, Schachter H
Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ont., Canada.
Glycoconj J. 1994 Jun;11(3):210-6. doi: 10.1007/BF00731220.
UDP-GlcNAc:Man alpha 1-6R beta(1-2)-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II (GlcNAc-T II; EC 2.4.1.143) is a key enzyme in the synthesis of complex N-glycans. We have tested a series of synthetic analogues of the substrate Man"'alpha 1-6(GlcNAc"beta 1-2Man'alpha 1-3)Man beta-O-octyl as substrates and inhibitors for rat liver GlcNAc-T II. The enzyme attaches N-acetylglucosamine in beta 1-2 linkage to the 2"'-OH of the Man"'alpha 1-6 residue. The 2"'-deoxy analogue is a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.13 mM). The 2"'-O-methyl compound does not bind to the enzyme presumably due to steric hindrance. The 3"'-, 4"'- and 6"'-OH groups are not essential for binding or catalysis since the 3"'-, 4"'- and 6"'-deoxy and -O-methyl derivatives are all good substrates. Increasing the size of the substituent at the 3"'-position to pentyl and substituted pentyl groups causes competitive inhibition (Ki = 1.0-2.5 mM). We have taken advantage of this effect to synthesize two potentially irreversible GlcNAc-T II inhibitors containing a photolabile 3"'-O-(4,4-azo)pentyl group and a 3"'-O-(5-iodoacetamido)pentyl group respectively. The data indicate that none of the hydroxyls of the Man"'alpha 1-6 residue are essential for binding although the 2"'- and 3"'-OH face the catalytic site of the enzyme. The 4-OH group of the Man beta-O-octyl residue is not essential for binding or catalysis since the 4-deoxy derivative is a good substrate; the 4-O-methyl derivative does not bind.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)