A general route to xyloglucan-peptide conjugates for the activation of cellulose surfaces
Journal article, 2012

Cellulose is an attractive supporting matrix for diverse biotechnological applications, including chromatography, diagnostics, and tissue replacement/scaffolding, due to its renewable resource status, low cost, and low non-specific interaction with biomolecules. In an effort to expand the biofunctionality of cellulose materials, we present here a versatile method for the synthesis of xyloglucan-peptide conjugates that harness the strong xyloglucan-cellulose binding interaction for gentle surface modification. Xylogluco-oligosaccharide aminoalditols (XGO-NH2) were coupled to both linear and cyclic peptides, which contained the endothelial cell epitope Arg-Gly-Asp, in a facile two-step approach employing diethyl squarate cross-linking. Subsequent xyloglucan endo-transglycosylase-mediated coupling of the resulting XGO-GRGDS (Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser) and XGO-c[RGDfK]-PEG-PEG (cyclo[Arg-Gly-Asp-(D-Phe)-Lys]-PEG-PEG; where PEG is 8-amino-3,6-dioxaoctanoic acid) conjugates into high molecular mass xyloglucan yielded xyloglucan-RGD peptide conjugates suitable for cellulose surface activation. Notably, use of XGO-squaramate as a readily accessible, versatile intermediate overcomes previous limitations of solid-phase synthetic approaches to XGO-peptide conjugates, and furthermore allows the method to be generalized to a wide variety of polypeptides and proteins, as well as diverse primary amino compounds.

Cellulose

binding

Glycoconjugates

oligosaccharides

Peptides

bacterial cellulose

Xyloglucan

rgd

functionalization

Diethyl squarate

structural-analysis

adhesion

proteins

plant-cell walls

crystal-structures

Author

A. C. Araujo

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

A. Nakhai

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

M. Ruda

AlbaNova University Center

R. Slattegard

AlbaNova University Center

Paul Gatenholm

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Polymer Technology

H. Brumer

Michael Smith Laboratories

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Carbohydrate Research

0008-6215 (ISSN) 1873426x (eISSN)

Vol. 354 116-120

Subject Categories

Chemical Process Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.carres.2012.03.038

More information

Latest update

4/10/2019