Efficient and Expedient Two-Step Pyranose-Retaining Fluorescein
Conjugation of Complex Reducing Oligosaccharides: Galectin
Oligosaccharide Specificity Studies in a Fluorescence Polarization
Assay
posted on 2003-11-19, 00:00authored byChristopher T. Öberg, Susanne Carlsson, Eric Fillion, Hakon Leffler, Ulf J. Nilsson
Fluorescence labeling of naturally occurring saccharides provides a tool for studying lectins. A practical
and efficient two-step protocol for fluorescence labeling of reducing sugars without disrupting their
pyranose structure has been developed, consisting of generation of the amino sugar using NH4HCO3(s)/NH3(aq, concentrated) followed by BOP-mediated acylation with derivatives of 5- or 6-carboxyfluorescein. The acylated conjugates were subsequently run against galectins-1, -3, and -8, β-galactoside
recognizing lectins of current interest, in a fluorescence polarization binding assay. Upon analyzing
a collection of isomerically pure 5- and 6-carboxyfluorescein derivatives with different tether lengths,
we found that conjugates based on 5-carboxyfluorescein gave significantly better results than the
ones based on 6-carboxyfluorescein and that galectins-1 and -8 favored conjugates with different tether
lengths than did galectin-3. The results show that fluorescence labeling can be chemically tuned to
find optimal probes for individual galectins but also probes interacting well with many galectins.