Identification of a specific inhibitor of nOGA - a caspase-3 cleaved O-GlcNAcase variant during apoptosis.

Journal: Biochemistry. Biokhimiia
Published:
Abstract

O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modification of serines/threonines on cytoplasmic proteins is a significant signal regulating cellular processes such as cell cycle, cell development, and cell apoptosis. O-GlcNAcase (OGA) is responsible for the removal of O-GlcNAc, and it thus plays a critical role in O-GlcNAc metabolism. Interestingly, OGA can be cleaved by caspase-3 into two fragments during apoptosis, producing an N-terminal fragment (1-413 a.a.), termed nOGA. Here, using 4-MU-GlcNAc (4-methylumbelliferyl 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-β-D-glucopyranoside) as substrate, we found that the nOGA fragment retains high glycosidase activity. To probe the role of nOGA in apoptosis, it is essential to develop a potent and specific nOGA inhibitor. However, many reported inhibitors active at nanomolar concentrations (including PUGNAc, STZ, GlcNAc-statin, and NAG-thiazoline) against full-length OGA were not potent for nOGA. Next, we screened a small triazole-linked carbohydrate library and first identified compound 4 (4-pyridyl-1-(2'-deoxy-2'-acetamido-β-D-glucopyranosyl)-1,2,3-triazole) as a potent and competitive inhibitor for nOGA. This compound shows 15-fold selectivity for nOGA (K(i) = 48 μM) over the full-length OGA (K(i) = 725 μM) and 10-fold selectivity over human lysosomal β-hexosaminidase A&B (Hex A&B) (K(i) = 502 μM). These results reveal that compound 4 can be used as a potent and selective inhibitor for probing the role of nOGA in biological systems.

Authors
Jing Li, Zhonghua Li, Tiehai Li, Lin Lin, Yan Zhang, Lina Guo, Yan Xu, Wei Zhao, Peng Wang