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Featured researches published by Eric Sterner.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2012

Engineering of routes to heparin and related polysaccharides

Ujjwal Bhaskar; Eric Sterner; Anne Marie Hickey; Akihiro Onishi; Fuming Zhang; Jonathan S. Dordick; Robert J. Linhardt

Anticoagulant heparin has been shown to possess important biological functions that vary according to its fine structure. Variability within heparin’s structure occurs owing to its biosynthesis and animal tissue-based recovery and adds another dimension to its complex polymeric structure. The structural variations in chain length and sulfation patterns mediate its interaction with many heparin-binding proteins, thereby eliciting complex biological responses. The advent of novel chemical and enzymatic approaches for polysaccharide synthesis coupled with high throughput combinatorial approaches for drug discovery have facilitated an increased effort to understand heparin’s structure–activity relationships. An improved understanding would offer potential for new therapeutic development through the engineering of polysaccharides. Such a bioengineering approach requires the amalgamation of several different disciplines, including carbohydrate synthesis, applied enzymology, metabolic engineering, and process biochemistry.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2012

Disaccharide analysis of glycosaminoglycan mixtures by ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry

Bo Yang; Yuqing Chang; Amanda Weyers; Eric Sterner; Robert J. Linhardt

Glycosaminoglycans are a family of polysaccharides widely distributed in all eukaryotic cells. These polyanionic, linear chain polysaccharides are composed of repeating disaccharide units that are often differentially substituted with sulfo groups. The diversity of glycosaminoglycan structures in cells, tissues and among different organisms reflect their functional an evolutionary importance. Glycosaminoglycan composition and structure also changes in development, aging and in disease progression, making their accurate and reliable analysis a critical, albeit, challenging endeavor. Quantitative disaccharide compositional analysis is one of the primary ways to characterize glycosaminoglycan composition and structure and has a direct relationship with glycosaminoglycan biological functions. In this study, glycosaminoglycan disaccharides, prepared from heparan sulfate/heparin, chondroitin sulfate/dermatan sulfate and neutral hyaluronic acid using multiple polysaccharide lyases, were fluorescently labeled with 2-aminoacridone, fractionated into 17 well-resolved components by reverse-phase ultra-performance liquid chromatography, and analyzed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. This analysis was successfully applied to cell, tissue, and biological fluid samples for the picomole level detection of glycosaminoglycan composition and structure.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2011

Ultra-performance ion-pairing liquid chromatography with on-line electrospray ion trap mass spectrometry for heparin disaccharide analysis

Bo Yang; Amanda Weyers; Jong Youn Baik; Eric Sterner; Susan T. Sharfstein; Shaker A. Mousa; Fuming Zhang; Jonathan S. Dordick; Robert J. Linhardt

A high-resolution method for the separation and analysis of disaccharides prepared from heparin and heparan sulfate (HS) using heparin lyases is described. Ultra-performance liquid chromatography in a reverse-phase ion-pairing mode efficiently separates eight heparin/HS disaccharides. The disaccharides can then be detected and quantified using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. This method is particularly useful in the analysis of small amounts of biological samples, including cells, tissues, and biological fluids, because it provides high sensitivity without being subject to interference from proteins, peptides, and other sample impurities.


Biochemistry | 2013

FGF-FGFR signaling mediated through glycosaminoglycans in microtiter plate and cell-based microarray platforms.

Eric Sterner; Luciana Meli; Seok Joon Kwon; Jonathan S. Dordick; Robert J. Linhardt

Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signals cell growth through its interaction with a fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) and a glycosaminoglycn (GAG) coreceptor. Here, we examine the signaling of five different FGFs (1, 2, 6, 8, and 8b) through FGFR3c. A small library of GAG and GAG-derivative coreceptors are screened to understand better the structure-activity relationship of these coreceptors on signaling. Initially, data were collected in a microtiter plate well-based cell proliferation assay. In an effort to reduce reagent requirements and improve assay throughput, a cell-based microarray platform was developed. In this cell-based microarray, FGFR3c-expressing cells were printed in alginate hydrogel droplets of ∼30 nL and incubated with FGF and GAG. Heparin was the most effective GAG coreceptor for all FGFs studied. Other GAGs, such as 2-O-desulfated heparin and chondroitin sulfate B, were also effective coreceptors. Signaling by FGF 8 and FGF 8b showed the widest tolerance for coreceptor structure. Finally, this on-chip cell-based microarray provides comparable data to a microtiter plate well-based assay, demonstrating that the coreceptor assay can be converted into a high-throughput assay.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Fibroblast Growth Factor-based Signaling through Synthetic Heparan Sulfate Blocks Copolymers Studied Using High Cell Density Three-dimensional Cell Printing

Eric Sterner; Sayaka Masuko; Guoyun Li; Lingyun Li; Dixy E. Green; Nigel J. Otto; Yongmei Xu; Paul L. DeAngelis; Jian Liu; Jonathan S. Dordick; Robert J. Linhardt

Background: Fibroblast growth factor-receptor-heparan sulfate (FGF-HS-FGFR) signals cell proliferation. Results: HS synthesized with sulfated domains at its non-reducing ends actively promotes cellular proliferation in a three-dimensional cell microarray. Conclusion: A symmetric 2:2:2 FGF-HS-FGFR complex is preferred over an asymmetric 2:1:2 model by these data. Significance: This paper suggests a preference for symmetry in the signal transduction complex having two FGF-FGFR on the non-reducing end of two HS chains. Four well-defined heparan sulfate (HS) block copolymers containing S-domains (high sulfo group content) placed adjacent to N-domains (low sulfo group content) were chemoenzymatically synthesized and characterized. The domain lengths in these HS block co-polymers were ∼40 saccharide units. Microtiter 96-well and three-dimensional cell-based microarray assays utilizing murine immortalized bone marrow (BaF3) cells were developed to evaluate the activity of these HS block co-polymers. Each recombinant BaF3 cell line expresses only a single type of fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) but produces neither HS nor fibroblast growth factors (FGFs). In the presence of different FGFs, BaF3 cell proliferation showed clear differences for the four HS block co-polymers examined. These data were used to examine the two proposed signaling models, the symmetric FGF2-HS2-FGFR2 ternary complex model and the asymmetric FGF2-HS1-FGFR2 ternary complex model. In the symmetric FGF2-HS2-FGFR2 model, two acidic HS chains bind in a basic canyon located on the top face of the FGF2-FGFR2 protein complex. In this model the S-domains at the non-reducing ends of the two HS proteoglycan chains are proposed to interact with the FGF2-FGFR2 protein complex. In contrast, in the asymmetric FGF2-HS1-FGFR2 model, a single HS chain interacts with the FGF2-FGFR2 protein complex through a single S-domain that can be located at any position within an HS chain. Our data comparing a series of synthetically prepared HS block copolymers support a preference for the symmetric FGF2-HS2-FGFR2 ternary complex model.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2014

Assays for determining heparan sulfate and heparin O -sulfotransferase activity and specificity

Eric Sterner; Lingyun Li; Priscilla Paul; Julie M. Beaudet; Jian Liu; Robert J. Linhardt; Jonathan S. Dordick

AbstractO-sulfotransferases (OSTs) are critical enzymes in the cellular biosynthesis of the biologically and pharmacologically important heparan sulfate and heparin. Recently, these enzymes have been cloned and expressed in bacteria for application in the chemoenzymatic synthesis of glycosaminoglycan-based drugs. OST activity assays have largely relied on the use of radioisotopic methods using [35S] 3′-phosphoadenosine-5′-phosphosulfate and scintillation counting. Herein, we examine alternative assays that are more compatible with a biomanufacturing environment. A high throughput microtiter-based approach is reported that relies on a coupled bienzymic colorimetric assay for heparan sulfate and heparin OSTs acting on polysaccharide substrates using arylsulfotransferase-IV and p-nitrophenylsulfate as a sacrificial sulfogroup donor. A second liquid chromatography-mass spectrometric assay, for heparan sulfate and heparin OSTs acting on structurally defined oligosaccharide substrates, is also reported that provides additional information on the number and positions of the transferred sulfo groups within the product. Together, these assays allow quantitative and mechanistic information to be obtained on OSTs that act on heparan sulfate and heparin precursors. FigureHerapan sulfate O-sulfotranferase coupled enzyme colorimetric assay


Analytical Biochemistry | 2011

Mass balance analysis of contaminated heparin product

Zhenling Liu; Zhongping Xiao; Sayaka Masuko; Wenjing Zhao; Eric Sterner; Vinod Bansal; Jawed Fareed; Jonathan S. Dordick; Fuming Zhang; Robert J. Linhardt

A quantitative analysis of a recalled contaminated lot of heparin sodium injection U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP) was undertaken in response to the controversy regarding the exact nature of the contaminant involved in the heparin (HP) crisis. A mass balance analysis of the formulated drug product was performed. After freeze-drying, a 1-ml vial for injection afforded 54.8±0.3 mg of dry solids. The excipients, sodium chloride and residual benzyl alcohol, accounted for 11.4±0.5 and 0.9±0.5 mg, respectively. Active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) represented 41.5±1.0 mg, corresponding to 75.7 wt% of dry mass. Exhaustive treatment of API with specific enzymes, heparin lyases, and/or chondroitin lyases was used to close mass balance. HP represented 30.5±0.5 mg, corresponding to 73.5 wt% of the API. Dermatan sulfate (DS) impurity represented 1.7±0.3 mg, corresponding to 4.1 wt% of API. Contaminant, representing 9.3±0.1 mg corresponding to 22.4 wt% of API, was found in the contaminated formulated drug product. The recovery of contaminant was close to quantitative (95.6-100 wt%). A single contaminant was unambiguously identified as oversulfated chondroitin sulfate (OSCS).


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2012

Photochemical preparation of a novel low molecular weight heparin

Kyohei Higashi; Saori Hosoyama; Asami Ohno; Sayaka Masuko; Bo Yang; Eric Sterner; Zhenyu Wang; Robert J. Linhardt; Toshihiko Toida


Glycobiology | 2017

Conformational flexibility of PL12 family heparinases: structure and substrate specificity of heparinase III from Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (BT4657)

ThirumalaiSelvi Ulaganathan; Rong Shi; Deqiang Yao; Ruo-Xu Gu; Marie-Line Garron; Maia Cherney; D. Peter Tieleman; Eric Sterner; Guoyun Li; Lingyun Li; Robert J. Linhardt; Miroslaw Cygler


Archive | 2012

Application of Carbon Nanotubes to Wound Healing Biotechnology

Trevor J. Simmons; Christopher J. Rivet; Gurtej Singh; Julie M. Beaudet; Eric Sterner; Daniela Guzman; Daniel P. Hashim; Sang-Hyun Lee; Guoguang Qian; Kim M. Lewis; Pankaj Karande; Pulickel M. Ajayan; Ryan J. Gilbert; Jonathan S. Dordick; Robert J. Linhardt

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Robert J. Linhardt

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Jonathan S. Dordick

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Bo Yang

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Fuming Zhang

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Lingyun Li

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Sayaka Masuko

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Guoyun Li

Ocean University of China

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Amanda Weyers

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Jian Liu

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Julie M. Beaudet

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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