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Featured researches published by Jonas Aretz.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Carbohydrate-Lectin Recognition of Sequence-Defined Heteromultivalent Glycooligomers

Daniela Ponader; Pauline Maffre; Jonas Aretz; Daniel Pussak; Nina M. Ninnemann; Stephan Schmidt; Peter H. Seeberger; Christoph Rademacher; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Laura Hartmann

Multivalency as a key principle in nature has been successfully adopted for the design and synthesis of artificial glycoligands by attaching multiple copies of monosaccharides to a synthetic scaffold. Besides their potential in various applied areas, e.g. as antiviral drugs, for the vaccine development and as novel biosensors, such glycomimetics also allow for a deeper understanding of the fundamental aspects of multivalent binding of both artificial and natural ligands. However, most glycomimetics so far neglect the purposeful arranged heterogeneity of their natural counterparts, thus limiting more detailed insights into the design and synthesis of novel glycomimetics. Therefore, this work presents the synthesis of monodisperse glycooligomers carrying different sugar ligands at well-defined positions along the backbone using for the first time sequential click chemistry and stepwise assembly of functional building blocks on solid support. This approach allows for straightforward access to sequence-defined, multivalent glycooligomers with full control over number, spacing, position, and type of sugar ligand. We demonstrate the synthesis of a set of heteromultivalent oligomers presenting mannose, galactose, and glucose residues. All heteromultivalent structures show surprisingly high affinities toward Concanavalin A lectin receptor in comparison to their homomultivalent analogues presenting the same number of binding ligands. Detailed studies of the ligand/receptor interaction using STD-NMR and 2fFCS indeed indicate a change in binding mechanism for trivalent glycooligomers presenting mannose or combinations of mannose and galactose residues. We find that galactose residues do not participate in the binding to the receptor, but they promote steric shielding of the heteromultivalent glycoligands and thus result in an overall increase in affinity. Furthermore, the introduction of nonbinding ligands seems to suppress receptor clustering of multivalent ligands. Overall these results support the importance of heteromultivalency specifically for the design of novel glycoligands and help to promote a fundamental understanding of multivalent binding modes.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2014

Computational and experimental prediction of human C-type lectin receptor druggability.

Jonas Aretz; Eike-Christian Wamhoff; Jonas Hanske; Dario Heymann; Christoph Rademacher

Mammalian C-type lectin receptors (CTLRS) are involved in many aspects of immune cell regulation such as pathogen recognition, clearance of apoptotic bodies, and lymphocyte homing. Despite a great interest in modulating CTLR recognition of carbohydrates, the number of specific molecular probes is limited. To this end, we predicted the druggability of a panel of 22 CTLRs using DoGSiteScorer. The computed druggability scores of most structures were low, characterizing this family as either challenging or even undruggable. To further explore these findings, we employed a fluorine-based nuclear magnetic resonance screening of fragment mixtures against DC-SIGN, a receptor of pharmacological interest. To our surprise, we found many fragment hits associated with the carbohydrate recognition site (hit rate = 13.5%). A surface plasmon resonance-based follow-up assay confirmed 18 of these fragments (47%) and equilibrium dissociation constants were determined. Encouraged by these findings we expanded our experimental druggability prediction to Langerin and MCL and found medium to high hit rates as well, being 15.7 and 10.0%, respectively. Our results highlight limitations of current in silico approaches to druggability assessment, in particular, with regard to carbohydrate-binding proteins. In sum, our data indicate that small molecule ligands for a larger panel of CTLRs can be developed.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Epitope Recognition of Antibodies against a Yersinia pestis Lipopolysaccharide Trisaccharide Component

Felix Broecker; Jonas Aretz; You Yang; Jonas Hanske; Xiaoqiang Guo; Anika Reinhardt; Annette Wahlbrink; Christoph Rademacher; Chakkumkal Anish; Peter H. Seeberger

Today, the process of selecting carbohydrate antigens as a basis for active vaccination and the generation of antibodies for therapeutic and diagnostic purposes is based on intuition combined with trial and error experiments. In efforts to establish a rational process for glycan epitope selection, we employed glycan array screening, surface plasmon resonance, and saturation transfer difference (STD)-NMR to elucidate the interactions between antibodies and glycans representing the Yersinia pestis lipopolysaccharide (LPS). A trisaccharide epitope of the LPS inner core glycan and different LPS-derived oligosaccharides from various Gram-negative bacteria were analyzed using this combination of techniques. The antibody-glycan interaction with a heptose substructure was determined at atomic-level detail. Antibodies specifically recognize the Y. pestis trisaccharide and some substructures with high affinity and specificity. No significant binding to LPS glycans from other bacteria was observed, which suggests that the epitopes for just one particular bacterial species can be identified. On the basis of these results we are beginning to understand the rules for structure-based design and selection of carbohydrate antigens.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Bacterial Polysaccharide Specificity of the Pattern Recognition Receptor Langerin Is Highly Species-dependent.

Jonas Hanske; Jessica Schulze; Jonas Aretz; Ryan McBride; Bernhard Loll; Henrik Schmidt; Yuriy A. Knirel; Wolfgang Rabsch; Markus C. Wahl; James C. Paulson; Christoph Rademacher

The recognition of pathogen surface polysaccharides by glycan-binding proteins is a cornerstone of innate host defense. Many members of the C-type lectin receptor family serve as pattern recognition receptors facilitating pathogen uptake, antigen processing, and immunomodulation. Despite the high evolutionary pressure in host-pathogen interactions, it is still widely assumed that genetic homology conveys similar specificities. Here, we investigate the ligand specificities of the human and murine forms of the myeloid C-type lectin receptor langerin for simple and complex ligands augmented by structural insight into murine langerin. Although the two homologs share the same three-dimensional structure and recognize simple ligands identically, a screening of more than 300 bacterial polysaccharides revealed highly diverging avidity and selectivity for larger and more complex glycans. Structural and evolutionary conservation analysis identified a highly variable surface adjacent to the canonic binding site, potentially forming a secondary site of interaction for large glycans.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Virtual screen to NMR (VS2NMR): Discovery of fragment hits for the CBP bromodomain.

Dimitrios Spiliotopoulos; Jian Zhu; Eike-Christian Wamhoff; Nicholas Deerain; Jean-Rémy Marchand; Jonas Aretz; Christoph Rademacher; Amedeo Caflisch

Overexpression of the CREB-binding protein (CBP), a bromodomain-containing transcription coactivator involved in a variety of cellular processes, has been observed in several types of cancer with a correlation to aggressiveness. We have screened a library of nearly 1500 fragments by high-throughput docking into the CBP bromodomain followed by binding energy evaluation using a force field with electrostatic solvation. Twenty of the 39 fragments selected by virtual screening are positive in one or more ligand-observed nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments. Four crystal structures of the CBP bromodomain in complex with in silico screening hits validate the pose predicted by docking. Thus, the success ratio of the high-throughput docking procedure is 50% or 10% if one considers the validation by ligand-observed NMR spectroscopy or X-ray crystallography, respectively. Compounds 1 and 3 show favorable ligand efficiency in two different in vitro binding assays. The structure of the CBP bromodomain in the complex with the brominated pyrrole 1 suggests fragment growing by Suzuki coupling.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2017

A keratan sulfate disaccharide prevents inflammation and the progression of emphysema in murine models.

Congxiao Gao; Reiko Fujinawa; Takayuki Yoshida; Manabu Ueno; Fumi Ota; Yasuhiko Kizuka; Tetsuya Hirayama; Hiroaki Korekane; Shinobu Kitazume; Toshitaka Maeno; Kazuaki Ohtsubo; Keiichi Yoshida; Yoshiki Yamaguchi; Bernd Lepenies; Jonas Aretz; Christoph Rademacher; Ahmed E. Hegab; Peter H. Seeberger; Tomoko Betsuyaku; Kozui Kida; Naoyuki Taniguchi

Emphysema is a typical component of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a progressive and inflammatory airway disease. However, no effective treatment currently exists. Here, we show that keratan sulfate (KS), one of the major glycosaminoglycans produced in the small airway, decreased in lungs of cigarette smoke-exposed mice. To confirm the protective effect of KS in the small airway, a disaccharide repeating unit of KS designated L4 ([SO3--6]Galβ1-4[SO3--6]GlcNAc) was administered to two murine models: elastase-induced-emphysema and LPS-induced exacerbation of a cigarette smoke-induced emphysema. Histological and microcomputed tomography analyses revealed that, in the mouse elastase-induced emphysema model, administration of L4 attenuated alveolar destruction. Treatment with L4 significantly reduced neutrophil influx, as well as the levels of inflammatory cytokines, tissue-degrading enzymes (matrix metalloproteinases), and myeloperoxidase in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, suggesting that L4 suppressed inflammation in the lung. L4 consistently blocked the chemotactic migration of neutrophils in vitro. Moreover, in the case of the exacerbation model, L4 inhibited inflammatory cell accumulation to the same extent as that of dexamethasone. Taken together, L4 represents one of the potential glycan-based drugs for the treatment of COPD through its inhibitory action against inflammation.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

19F NMR-Guided Design of Glycomimetic Langerin Ligands

Eike-Christian Wamhoff; Jonas Hanske; Lennart Schnirch; Jonas Aretz; Maurice Grube; Daniel Varon Silva; Christoph Rademacher

C-type lectin receptors (CLRs) play a pivotal role in pathogen defense and immune homeostasis. Langerin, a CLR predominantly expressed on Langerhans cells, represents a potential target receptor for the development of anti-infectives or immunomodulatory therapies. As mammalian carbohydrate binding sites typically display high solvent exposure and hydrophilicity, the recognition of natural monosaccharide ligands is characterized by low affinities. Consequently, glycomimetic ligand design poses challenges that extend to the development of suitable assays. Here, we report the first application of (19)F R2-filtered NMR to address these challenges for a CLR, i.e., Langerin. The homogeneous, monovalent assay was essential to evaluating the in silico design of 2-deoxy-2-carboxamido-α-mannoside analogs and enabled the implementation of a fragment screening against the carbohydrate binding site. With the identification of both potent monosaccharide analogs and fragment hits, this study represents an important advancement toward the design of glycomimetic Langerin ligands and highlights the importance of assay development for other CLRs.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Identification of Multiple Druggable Secondary Sites by Fragment Screening against DC-SIGN

Jonas Aretz; Hannes Baukmann; Elena Shanina; Jonas Hanske; Robert Wawrzinek; Viktor A. Zapol'skii; Peter H. Seeberger; Dieter E. Kaufmann; Christoph Rademacher

DC-SIGN is a cell-surface receptor for several pathogenic threats, such as HIV, Ebola virus, or Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Multiple attempts to develop inhibitors of the underlying carbohydrate-protein interactions have been undertaken in the past fifteen years. Still, drug-like DC-SIGN ligands are sparse, which is most likely due to its hydrophilic, solvent-exposed carbohydrate-binding site. Herein, we report on a parallel fragment screening against DC-SIGN applying SPR and a reporter displacement assay, which complements previous screenings using 19 F NMR spectroscopy and chemical fragment microarrays. Hit validation by SPR and 1 H-15 N HSQC NMR spectroscopy revealed that although no fragment bound in the primary carbohydrate site, five secondary sites are available to harbor drug-like molecules. Building on key interactions of the reported fragment hits, these pockets will be targeted in future approaches to accelerate the development of DC-SIGN inhibitors.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

High affinity sugar ligands of C-type lectin receptor langerin

Fumi Ota; Tetsuya Hirayama; Yasuhiko Kizuka; Yoshiki Yamaguchi; Reiko Fujinawa; Masahiro Nagata; Hendra S. Ismanto; Bernd Lepenies; Jonas Aretz; Christoph Rademacher; Peter H. Seeberger; Takashi Angata; Shinobu Kitazume; Keiichi Yoshida; Tomoko Betsuyaku; Kozui Kida; Sho Yamasaki; Naoyuki Taniguchi

BACKGROUND Langerin, a C-type lectin receptor (CLR) expressed in a subset of dendritic cells (DCs), binds to glycan ligands for pathogen capture and clearance. Previous studies revealed that langerin has an unusual binding affinity toward 6-sulfated galactose (Gal), a structure primarily found in keratan sulfate (KS). However, details and biological outcomes of this interaction have not been characterized. Based on a recent discovery that the disaccharide L4, a KS component that contains 6-sulfo-Gal, exhibits anti-inflammatory activity in mouse lung, we hypothesized that L4-related compounds are useful tools for characterizing the langerin-ligand interactions and their therapeutic application. METHODS We performed binding analysis between purified long and short forms of langerin and a series of KS disaccharide components. We also chemically synthesized oligomeric derivatives of L4 to develop a new high-affinity ligand of langerin. RESULTS We show that the binding critically requires the 6-sulfation of Gal and that the long form of langerin displays higher affinity than the short form. The synthesized trimeric (also designated as triangle or Tri) and polymeric (pendant) L4 derivatives displayed over 1000-fold higher affinity toward langerin than monomeric L4. The pendant L4, but not the L4 monomer, was found to effectively transduce langerin signaling in a model cell system. CONCLUSIONS L4 is a specific ligand for langerin. Oligomerization of L4 unit increased the affinity toward langerin. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE These results suggest that oligomeric L4 derivatives will be useful for clarifying the langerin functions and for the development of new glycan-based anti-inflammatory drugs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Lucky kindlin: A cloverleaf at the integrin tail

Patricia Kammerer; Jonas Aretz; Reinhard Fässler

In a paper published in PNAS, Li et al. (1) solve the long-awaited crystal structure of kindlin-2, which plays a central role in integrin activation, clustering, and signaling (2, 3). Integrins are a large family of heterodimeric adhesion molecules composed of α- and β-subunits and expressed on almost all cells. They mediate cell matrix adhesion by binding extracellular matrix proteins, such as collagens, fibronectin, and laminins, and cell–cell adhesion by interacting with counterreceptors such as VCAM, ICAM, and cadherins (Fig. 1 A ). Upon ligand binding, integrins cluster and assemble an enormous number of proteins at their short cytoplasmic domains, which are collectively called the adhesome (4). The adhesome transmits biochemical signals into the cell and connects integrins to the actin cytoskeleton, which, in turn, enables the transduction of myosin-II–generated traction forces to ligated integrins. Fig. 1. Kindlin and talin promote integrin activation. ( A ) Integrins are heterodimers (α, turquoise; β, red) that can adopt three conformations: BC, EC, or EO. The EO conformation, corresponding to the active conformation, is induced and/or stabilized by talin (violet) and kindlin (cyan), which bind to specific motifs in the β-integrin tail (magnified) and to charged lipids in the plasma membrane (yellow). The distribution of BC, EC, and EO conformations in equilibrium on K652 cells is depicted for α5β1 integrins. A model of a kindlin-2 monomer [F0–F3 modules (Protein Data Bank [PDB] ID code 5XPY, cyan)] and PH domain (PDB ID code 4F7H, green) ( B ) and a model of dimeric kindlin-2 (PDB ID code 5XQ0, cyan) ( C ) interacting with talin (PDB ID code 3G9W, violet) and the β1-integrin tail (red) are shown. Regions known to interact with charged lipids are highlighted in yellow. The PH domain was modeled into the structure to demonstrate its size and potential localization, whereas the flexible loop inserted into the F1 domain is … [↵][1]1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: faessler{at}biochem.mpg.de. [1]: #xref-corresp-1-1

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Dieter E. Kaufmann

Clausthal University of Technology

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Viktor A. Zapol'skii

Clausthal University of Technology

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