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Featured researches published by Joseph V. Lomino.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Emerging Technologies for Making Glycan-Defined Glycoproteins

Lai-Xi Wang; Joseph V. Lomino

Protein glycosylation is a common and complex posttranslational modification of proteins, which expands functional diversity while boosting structural heterogeneity. Glycoproteins, the end products of such a modification, are typically produced as mixtures of glycoforms possessing the same polypeptide backbone but differing in the site of glycosylation and/or in the structures of pendant glycans, from which single glycoforms are difficult to isolate. The urgent need for glycan-defined glycoproteins in both detailed structure-function relationship studies and therapeutic applications has stimulated an extensive interest in developing various methods for manipulating protein glycosylation. This review highlights emerging technologies that hold great promise in making a variety of glycan-defined glycoproteins, with a particular emphasis in the following three areas: specific glycoengineering of host biosynthetic pathways, in vitro chemoenzymatic glycosylation remodeling, and chemoselective and site-specific glycosylation of proteins.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

A two-step enzymatic glycosylation of polypeptides with complex N-glycans

Joseph V. Lomino; Andreas Naegeli; Jared Orwenyo; Mohammed N. Amin; Markus Aebi; Lai-Xi Wang

A chemoenyzmatic method for direct glycosylation of polypeptides is described. The method consists of two site-specific enzymatic glycosylation steps: introduction of a glucose moiety at the consensus N-glycosylation sequence (NXS/T) in a polypeptide by an N-glycosyltransferase (NGT) and attachment of a complex N-glycan to the glucose primer by an endoglycosidase (ENGase)-catalyzed transglycosylation. Our experiments demonstrated that a relatively small excess of the UDP-Glc (the donor substrate) was sufficient for an effective glucosylation of polypeptides by the NGT, and different high-mannose and complex type N-glycans could be readily transferred to the glucose moiety by ENGases to provide full-size glycopeptides. The usefulness of the chemoenzymatic method was exemplified by an efficient synthesis of a complex glycoform of polypeptide C34, a potent HIV inhibitor derived from HIV-1 gp41. A comparative study indicated that the Glc-peptide was equally efficient as the natural GlcNAc-peptide to serve as an acceptor in the transglycosylation with sugar oxazoline as the donor substrate. Interestingly, the Glc-Asn linked glycopeptide was completely resistant to PNGase F digestion, in contrast to the GlcNAc-Asn linked natural glycopeptide that is an excellent substrate for hydrolysis. In addition, the Glc-Asn linked glycopeptide showed at least 10-fold lower hydrolytic activity toward Endo-M than the natural GlcNAc-Asn linked glycopeptide. The chemoenzymatic glycosylation method described here provides an efficient way to introducing complex N-glycans into polypeptides, for gain of novel properties that could be valuable for drug discovery.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Endo-F3 Glycosynthase Mutants Enable Chemoenzymatic Synthesis of Core-fucosylated Triantennary Complex Type Glycopeptides and Glycoproteins.

John Giddens; Joseph V. Lomino; Mohammed N. Amin; Lai-Xi Wang

Chemoenzymatic synthesis is emerging as a promising approach to the synthesis of homogeneous glycopeptides and glycoproteins highly demanded for functional glycomics studies, but its generality relies on the availability of a range of enzymes with high catalytic efficiency and well defined substrate specificity. We describe in this paper the discovery of glycosynthase mutants derived from Elizabethkingia meningoseptica endoglycosidase F3 (Endo-F3) of the GH18 family, which are devoid of the inherent hydrolytic activity but are able to take glycan oxazolines for transglycosylation. Notably, the Endo-F3 D165A and D165Q mutants demonstrated high acceptorsubstrate specificity toward α1,6-fucosyl-GlcNAc-Asn or α1,6-fucosyl-GlcNAc-polypeptide in transglycosylation, enabling a highly convergent synthesis of core-fucosylated, complex CD52 glycopeptide antigen. The Endo-F3 mutants were able to use both bi- and triantennary glycan oxazolines as substrates for transglycosylation, in contrast to previously reported endoglycosidases derived from Endo-S, Endo-M, Endo-D, and Endo-A mutants that could not recognize triantennary N-glycans. Using rituximab as a model system, we have further demonstrated that the Endo-F3 mutants are highly efficient for glycosylation remodeling of monoclonal antibodies to produce homogeneous intact antibody glycoforms. Interestingly, the new triantennary glycan glycoform of antibody showed much higher affinity for galectin-3 than that of the commercial antibody. The Endo-F3 mutants represent the first endoglycosidase-based glycosynthases capable of transferring triantennary complex N-glycans, which would be very useful for glycoprotein synthesis and glycosylation remodeling of antibodies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Crystal structure of Streptococcus pyogenes EndoS, an immunomodulatory endoglycosidase specific for human IgG antibodies

Beatriz Trastoy; Joseph V. Lomino; Brian G. Pierce; Lester G. Carter; Sebastian Günther; John Giddens; Greg A. Snyder; Thomas M. Weiss; Zhiping Weng; Lai-Xi Wang; Eric J. Sundberg

Significance Because bacteria colonize hostile environments they have evolved immune evasion mechanisms, including the expression of enzymes that specifically modify host immune system proteins. Streptococcus pyogenes secretes an enzyme called EndoS that removes carbohydrates specifically from human antibodies, impairing their ability to activate immune defenses. Because of its high substrate specificity, EndoS is also being developed as a treatment for autoimmune diseases and is a key enzyme used in the production of antibodies bearing customized carbohydrates. We have determined the three-dimensional structure of EndoS and present a molecular model depicting how EndoS engages antibodies with high specificity. Our data provide a roadmap for engineering EndoS variants with unique activities for clinical and biotechnological applications. To evade host immune mechanisms, many bacteria secrete immunomodulatory enzymes. Streptococcus pyogenes, one of the most common human pathogens, secretes a large endoglycosidase, EndoS, which removes carbohydrates in a highly specific manner from IgG antibodies. This modification renders antibodies incapable of eliciting host effector functions through either complement or Fc γ receptors, providing the bacteria with a survival advantage. On account of this antibody-specific modifying activity, EndoS is being developed as a promising injectable therapeutic for autoimmune diseases that rely on autoantibodies. Additionally, EndoS is a key enzyme used in the chemoenzymatic synthesis of homogenously glycosylated antibodies with tailored Fc γ receptor-mediated effector functions. Despite the tremendous utility of this enzyme, the molecular basis of EndoS specificity for, and processing of, IgG antibodies has remained poorly understood. Here, we report the X-ray crystal structure of EndoS and provide a model of its encounter complex with its substrate, the IgG1 Fc domain. We show that EndoS is composed of five distinct protein domains, including glycosidase, leucine-rich repeat, hybrid Ig, carbohydrate binding module, and three-helix bundle domains, arranged in a distinctive V-shaped conformation. Our data suggest that the substrate enters the concave interior of the enzyme structure, is held in place by the carbohydrate binding module, and that concerted conformational changes in both enzyme and substrate are required for subsequent antibody deglycosylation. The EndoS structure presented here provides a framework from which novel endoglycosidases could be engineered for additional clinical and biotechnological applications.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2013

Liquid–liquid diffusion crystallization improves the X-ray diffraction of EndoS, an endo-β-N-acetyl­glucosaminidase from Streptococcus pyogenes with activity on human IgG

Beatriz Trastoy; Joseph V. Lomino; Lai-Xi Wang; Eric J. Sundberg

Endoglycosidase S (EndoS) is an enzyme secreted by Streptococcus pyogenes that specifically hydrolyzes the β-1,4-di-N-acetylchitobiose core glycan on immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies. One of the most common human pathogens and the cause of group A streptococcal infections, S. pyogenes secretes EndoS in order to evade the host immune system by rendering IgG effector mechanisms dysfunctional. On account of its specificity for IgG, EndoS has also been used extensively for chemoenzymatic synthesis of homogeneous IgG glycoprotein preparations and is being developed as a novel therapeutic for a wide range of autoimmune diseases. The structural basis of its enzymatic activity and substrate specificity, however, remains unknown. Here, the purification and crystallization of EndoS are reported. Using traditional hanging-drop and sitting-drop vapor-diffusion crystallization, crystals of EndoS were grown that diffracted to a maximum of 3.5 Å resolution but suffered from severe anisotropy, the data from which could only be reasonably processed to 7.5 Å resolution. When EndoS was crystallized by liquid-liquid diffusion, it was possible to grow crystals with a different space group to those obtained by vapor diffusion. Crystals of wild-type endoglycosidase and glycosynthase constructs of EndoS grown by liquid-liquid diffusion diffracted to 2.6 and 1.9 Å resolution, respectively, with a greatly diminished anisotropy. Despite extensive efforts, the failure to reproduce these liquid-liquid diffusion-grown crystals by vapor diffusion suggests that these crystallization methods each sample a distinct crystallization space.


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Site-specific chemoenzymatic glycoengineering of cetuximab, a therapeutic monoclonal antibody (607.16)

Joseph V. Lomino; John Giddens; Lai-Xi Wang


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Chemoenzymatic synthesis of HIV-1 V1V2 glycopeptide antigens for epitope characterization and neutralizing antibody detection (1004.4)

Mohammed N. Amin; Joseph V. Lomino; Lai-Xi Wang


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Endo F3 glycosynthase mutant enables chemoenzymatic synthesis of core fucosylated triantennary complex type glycopeptides and glycoproteins (1007.7)

John Giddens; Joseph V. Lomino; Lai-Xi Wang


Journal of Immunology | 2014

The structural basis for the anti-inflammatory activity of sialylated antibodies (THER5P.822)

Andrew Pincetic; Alysia A. Ahmed; Joseph V. Lomino; Lai-Xi Wang; Pamela J. Bjorkman; Jeffrey V. Ravetch


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2014

P-C6 Crystal structure of EndoS, an immunomodulatory endoglycosidase specific for human IgG antibodies.

Beatriz Trastoy; Joseph V. Lomino; Lai-Xi Wang; Eric J. Sundberg

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Beatriz Trastoy

Spanish National Research Council

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Alysia A. Ahmed

California Institute of Technology

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Pamela J. Bjorkman

California Institute of Technology

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Sebastian Günther

Boston Biomedical Research Institute

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