WO1999064378A2 - Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same - Google Patents

Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1999064378A2
WO1999064378A2 PCT/CA1999/000550 CA9900550W WO9964378A2 WO 1999064378 A2 WO1999064378 A2 WO 1999064378A2 CA 9900550 W CA9900550 W CA 9900550W WO 9964378 A2 WO9964378 A2 WO 9964378A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
monomer
nucleoside
halogen
spacer
glcnac
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/CA1999/000550
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO1999064378A3 (en
Inventor
Jeremy Carver
James Dennis
François D. TROPPER
Uttam Saha
Lothar Ziser
Alessandro Datti
Rob Donovan
Original Assignee
Glycodesign Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Glycodesign Inc. filed Critical Glycodesign Inc.
Priority to JP2000553388A priority Critical patent/JP2002517474A/en
Priority to CA002334338A priority patent/CA2334338A1/en
Priority to AU44930/99A priority patent/AU4493099A/en
Priority to MXPA00012237A priority patent/MXPA00012237A/en
Priority to EP99927613A priority patent/EP1086064A2/en
Publication of WO1999064378A2 publication Critical patent/WO1999064378A2/en
Publication of WO1999064378A3 publication Critical patent/WO1999064378A3/en
Priority to NO20006244A priority patent/NO20006244L/en

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07HSUGARS; DERIVATIVES THEREOF; NUCLEOSIDES; NUCLEOTIDES; NUCLEIC ACIDS
    • C07H19/00Compounds containing a hetero ring sharing one ring hetero atom with a saccharide radical; Nucleosides; Mononucleotides; Anhydro-derivatives thereof
    • C07H19/02Compounds containing a hetero ring sharing one ring hetero atom with a saccharide radical; Nucleosides; Mononucleotides; Anhydro-derivatives thereof sharing nitrogen
    • C07H19/04Heterocyclic radicals containing only nitrogen atoms as ring hetero atom
    • C07H19/06Pyrimidine radicals
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K9/00Peptides having up to 20 amino acids, containing saccharide radicals and having a fully defined sequence; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K9/001Peptides having up to 20 amino acids, containing saccharide radicals and having a fully defined sequence; Derivatives thereof the peptide sequence having less than 12 amino acids and not being part of a ring structure
    • C07K9/003Peptides being substituted by heterocyclic radicals, e.g. bleomycin, phleomycin
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/48Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving transferase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C40COMBINATORIAL TECHNOLOGY
    • C40BCOMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY; LIBRARIES, e.g. CHEMICAL LIBRARIES
    • C40B40/00Libraries per se, e.g. arrays, mixtures

Definitions

  • the invention is directed to predetermined libraries of compounds, related compounds useful for making such libraries, and compositions containing the compounds BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • Interactions between proteins and carbohydrates are involved in a wide array of biological recognition events, including fertilization, molecular targeting, intercellular recognition, and viral, bacterial, and fungal pathogenesis
  • the oligosaccha ⁇ de portions of glycoproteins and glyco pids mediate recognition between cells and cells, between cells and ligands, between cells and the extracellular matrix, and between cells and pathogens
  • Inhibition of carbohydrate processing enzymes involved in the synthesis, transport, and cleavage of oligosaccharides can be used as a means to inhibit interactions between proteins and oligosaccharides and inhibit the recognition phenomena
  • two groups of enzymes associated with the in vivo synthesis of oligosaccharides can be targeted
  • the enzymes of the Leloir pathway transfer sugars activated as sugar nucleoside phosphates to a growing oligosaccha ⁇ de chain
  • the nucleoside phosphate building blocks involved in the Leloir pathway include UDP-Glc, UDP- GlcUA, UDP-GlcNAc, UDP-Gal, UDP-GalNAc, UDP-Idua, GDP-Man, GDP-Fuc.
  • the other group of enzymes associated with the in vivo synthesis of oligosaccharides are the non-Leloir pathway enzymes that transfer carbohydrate units activated as sugar phosphates, but not as sugar nucleoside phosphates
  • Glycosyltransferases catalyze the addition of activated sugars from nucleotides in a stepwise fashion to a protein or pid or to the non-reducing end of a growing ohgosaccha ⁇ de
  • Each NDP-sugar residue requires a distinct class of glycosyltransferase and each of the glycosyltransferases appear to catalyze the formation of a unique glycosidic linkage
  • Oligosaccharides may be linked to proteins by N-glycosidic or O-glycosidic linkages In an N-hn
  • the Golgi enzymes ⁇ (Tl-6) /V-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V (I e GlcNAc-TV) and core 2 ⁇ (Tl-6) /V-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (I e core 2 GlcNAc-T) are responsible for the extension of GlcNAc ⁇ (Tl-6) branched N- and (9-l ⁇ nked carbohydrate side chains of cell-surface glycoproteins These side chains are found on the surface of human tumor cells and they have been associated with cancer invasion and metastasis (Dennis et al , Science 236 582, 1987, Demetriou et al , J Cell Biol /50 383, 1995) GlcNAc-TV and core 2 GlcNAc-T have been shown to be up-regulated in human carcinomas (Femandes et al , Cancer Res 51 718-723, 1991, Shimodaira, K
  • GlcNAc-TV As well as enzymes supplying acceptor substrates to GlcNAc-TV (l e GlcNAc-TI. ⁇ -mannosidase II and core 2 GlcNAc-T of the O-hnked pathway) are useful targets for anti-cancer pharmaceuticals
  • Fucosyltransferases are involved in determining the expression of sialyl Lewis' 1 (sLex )
  • Inhibitors of enzymes that synthesize specific carbohydrate structures of bacteria that play an important role in pathogenicitv can be used to enhance the susceptibility of the bacteria to the host immune s>stem and to inhibit the entry of the bacteria into human cells and tissues
  • a specific bacterial carbohydrate structure called low molecular weight oligosaccha ⁇ de (LOS) that is similar to a carbohydrate structure found on human glycoproteins and glycolipids, protects the bacterium from being recognized and cleared by the host's immune system
  • Inhibitors of the enzymes responsible for synthesizing the LOS structure can reduce the ability of bacteria such as N gonorrhea to elude immune surveillance in a host It is apparent that there is a need for small molecule inhibitors of carbohydrate processing enzymes including GlcNAc-transferases I through V, galactosyltransferases, sialo transferases, fucosyl transferases and core 2 GlcNAc with structural and conformational diversity There is also a need
  • nucleoside peptide molecule comprising (a) a nucleoside monomer, (b) a spacer monomer coupled to a nucleoside monomer, wherein the spacer monomer comprises one or more amino acids, or a peptidomimetic or peptide analog, and (c) cap monomers attached to the spacer monomer
  • the invention also relates to a process for preparing a combinatorial library containing a predetermined collection of nucleoside peptide molecules for inhibiting the transfer of a sugar from a selected sugar nucleotide donor having a heterocychc amine base, to a selected acceptor by a carbohydrate processing enzyme comprising
  • nucleoside monomer unit which nucleoside monomer unit comprises a heterocychc amine base coupled to a sugar wherein the base corresponds to the heterocychc amine base of the sugar nucleotide donor, or a modified form or analogue of the base, and (b) capping any free functional groups or amine groups with a cap monomer unit
  • the invention also relates to methods of using the combinatorial library for screening for pharmacologically active molecules, and pharmaceutical compositions containing compounds identified by the methods
  • the invention contemplates a solid-phase bioassay for identifying a compound having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme which comprises (a) coupling an acceptor for the carbohydrate processing enzyme to a polymer and coating onto a carrier, (b) adding a carbohydrate processing enzyme, a sugar nucleotide donor labeled with a detectable substance, and a test compound, and (c) measuring the detectable change produced by the detectable substance
  • the invention also contemplates a method for identifying a compound that inhibits N-hnked oligosaccha ⁇ de processing comprising (a) reacting a test compound with cells expressing N-hnked oligosaccharides, in the presence of leukoagglutinating phytohemagglutmin (L-PHA) and measunng alkaline phosphatase activity, and (b) comparing to a control in the absence of the compound wherein an increase in alkaline phosphatase activity indicates that the compound inhibits N-hnked oligosaccha ⁇ de processing
  • the method may be used to identify compounds that inhibit all steps in the N-linked oligosaccharide pathway prior to ⁇ l-4 Gal-transferase, including compounds that inhibit the carbohydrate processing enzymes specifically described herein, and Golgi ⁇ -mannosidase.
  • a compound contemplated by the present invention having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme can be useful for the treatment and prophylaxis of tumor growth and metastasis of tumors; the prevention of tumor recurrence after surgery; the treatment of other anti- proliferative conditions such as viral infections; the stimulation of bone marrow cell proliferation, the treatment of immunocompromised patients, such as patients infected with HIV, or other viruses or infectious agents including bacteria and fungi; the prevention and treatment of diseases caused by bacterial pathogens having carbohydrate structures on their surface associated with virulence such as Neisseria. Haemophilus. E. coli, Bacillus, Salmonella, Campvlobacter, Klebsiella. Pseudomonas,
  • a compound of the invention may also be used in patients undergoing bone marrow transplants, and as hemorestorative or chemoprotective agents in patients with chemical or tumor-induced immune suppression.
  • Figure 1 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 2.3-O-isopropylidineuridine from uridine
  • Figure 2 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 2,3-0-isopropylidene-5-0- methane sulfonyl uridine from 2,3-O-isopropylidine uridine;
  • Figure 3 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 5-deoxy-5-azido-2,3-0- isopropylidenyl uridine from 2,3-0-isopropylidene-5-0-methanesulfonyl uridine;
  • Figure 4 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 5-deoxy-5-amino-2,3-0- isopropylidenyl uridine from the parent azide;
  • Figure 5 is a schematic diagram showing a process for coupling an N-Boc protected spacer monomer unit to a nucleoside monomer unit;
  • Figure 6 is a schematic diagram for a process for deprotecting an N-Boc protected spacer monomer unit coupled to a nucleoside monomer unit
  • Figure 7 is a schematic diagram showing a process for repeated coupling of Fmoc -protected spacer monomer units to a nucleoside monomer unit;
  • Figure 8 is a schematic diagram for capping a spacer monomer unit that is coupled to a nucleoside monomer unit
  • Figure 9 is a schematic diagram showing the synthesis of a glycopolymer for a solid-phase core 2 GlcNAc-T assay
  • Figure 10 is a schematic diagram showing a glycopolymer for a solid-phase GlcNAc-T V assay
  • Figure 1 1 is a graph showing the distribution of normalized core 2 GlcNAc-T assay results for
  • Figure 12 is a graph showing the results of a high-throughput screen to detect microbial extracts with inhibitory effects on N-linked oligosaccharide processing in MDAY-D2 cells.
  • monomer unit refers to a molecule prior to coupling or conjugation to another monomer unit.
  • a “monomer” refers to a molecule after coupling or conjugating to form a nucleoside peptide molecule.
  • Monomer units used in the present invention to form the predetermined nucleoside peptide molecules include a nucleoside monomer unit, a spacer monomer unit, and a cap monomer unit.
  • a nucleoside monomer unit is selected based on the type of carbohydrate processing enzyme targeted for inhibition, and in particular the sugar nucleotide donor for the enzyme from which a sugar is transferred to an acceptor.
  • a "sugar nucleotide donor” refers to a molecule comprising a nucleotide having a sugar component, a heterocyclic amine base, and a phosphate unit, coupled to a selected sugar that is transferred by a carbohydrate processing enzyme to an acceptor.
  • An "acceptor” refers to the part of a carbohydrate structure (e.g. glycoprotein, glycolipid) where the selected sugar is transferred by a carbohydrate processing enzyme.
  • Carbohydrate processing enzymes for which combinatorial libraries may be prepared in accordance with the invention include eukaryotic glycosyltransferases involved in the biosynthesis of glycoproteins, glycolipids, glycosylphosphatidylinositols and other complex glycoconjugates, and prokaryotic glycosyltransferases involved in the synthesis of carbohydrate structures of bacteria and viruses, including enzymes involved in LOS and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis.
  • glycosyltransferases such as N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases, including N- acetylglucosaminyltransferases I through V and ⁇ -l,3-galactosyl-0-glycosyl-glycoprotein ⁇ 1,6-N- acetylgucosaminyl transferase (core 2 GlcNAc); fucosyltransferase; N-acetyl galactosaminyltransferases; galactosyltransferases; mannosyltransferases; and glucuronosyltransferases, preferably N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases.
  • N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases including N- acetylglucosaminyltransferases I through V and ⁇ -l,3-galactosyl-0-glycosyl-glycoprotein
  • a nucleoside monomer unit used in the molecules of the present invention is composed of a heterocyclic amine base in ⁇ -N-glycosidic linkage with a sugar.
  • the sugar is ribose, or deoxyribose
  • the heterocyclic amine base corresponds to the heterocyclic amine base of the sugar nucleotide donor for a selected carbohydrate processing enzyme.
  • uracil can be selected for N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases and galactosyltransferases.
  • Structural analogues of the heterocyc c amine bases may also be used
  • the base when it is uracil it may have groups at the C-5 position including but not limited to alkyl or aryl with electron donating and electron withdrawing groups Hydroxyl groups in the base may also be protected.
  • the sugar may be modified for example, the 2' and 3' hydroxvls may be blocked with acetonide, acylated. or alkylated or substituted with other groups such as halogen
  • nucleoside monomer units include undine, 2'-deoxyu ⁇ d ⁇ ne, and 5'- am ⁇ no-5'-deoxy-2',3'-( - ⁇ sopropyl ⁇ d ⁇ ne undine (for galactosyltransferases and GlcNAc transferases, cytidine, 2'-deoxycyt ⁇ dme, 5'-am ⁇ no-5'-deoxy-2',3'-0- ⁇ sopropyl ⁇ d ⁇ necyt ⁇ d ⁇ ne (for sialo transferases), and guanosine, 2'-deoxyguanos ⁇ ne. 5 ' -am ⁇ no-5'-deoxy-2 ⁇ 3'- ⁇ 9- ⁇ sopropyl ⁇ d ⁇ neguanos ⁇ ne (for fucosyl transferases), respectively
  • a nucleoside monomer unit is linked to a spacer monomer unit by coupling appropriate reactive groups such as carboxylic acids, or activated esters thereof (e g hydroxybenzotriazole, pentafiuorophenol or N-hydroxysuccinimide esters), carboxylic anhydrides (mixed or symmetric), acyl halides, chloro formates, halides, ketones, aldehydes, sulfony l chlorides, isocyanates, or isothiocyanates, to other reactive functional groups such as amines to form a stable linkage such as an amide, carbamate, ammo, sulfonamide.
  • appropriate reactive groups such as carboxylic acids, or activated esters thereof (e g hydroxybenzotriazole, pentafiuorophenol or N-hydroxysuccinimide esters), carboxylic anhydrides (mixed or symmetric), acyl halides, chloro formates, halides, ketones
  • a spacer monomer unit for use in the invention may comprise any functional group that mimics the phosphate/ sugar linkage in a sugar nucleotide donor for a carbohydrate processing enzyme, or which interacts with the enzyme by other mechanisms
  • the spacer monomer unit may have a charged center
  • Examples of spacer monomer units that can be used in the molecules of the invention include one or more amino acids, preferably a single amino acid, a dipeptide, or t ⁇ peptide, or peptidomimetics/ peptide analog
  • Ammo acids used in the spacer monomer unit may be naturally-occurring or synthetic amino acids, and they can be aliphatic, or aromatic.
  • An amino acid in the spacer monomer unit may be a chiral or achiral ammo acid including but not limited to an L-ammo acid, a D-amino acid, an ⁇ -ammo acid, a ⁇ -amino acid, or an analog of an amino acid.
  • one or more amino acids in the spacer monomer unit may be substituted with a substituent group such as an amide, alkyl, amine.
  • amino acids may be capped with suitable protecting groups as described herein
  • the amino acid or peptides may comprise acidic amino acid residues including aspartic acid or glutamic acid, and aspartic acid and glutamic acid mono-benzyl esters or t-butyl esters (for example, at the ⁇ - and ⁇ - positions for the former, and a- and ⁇ - for the latter).
  • ⁇ -p-tosyl L-arginine ⁇ -nitro-L-arginine, N- ⁇ -CBz-L-lysine, L-glutamine.
  • Peptidomimetics or peptide analogs may also be used in the spacer monomer unit.
  • PEPTIDES AND PROTEINS, B. Weinstein, eds., Marcel Dekker, New York, p.267 (1983); Spatola, A. F., Vega Data (March 1983), Vol. 1, Issue 3, PEPTIDE BACKBONE MODIFICATIONS (general review); Morley. Trends Pharm Sci (1980) pp. 463-468 (general review); Gaute ( 1994) Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. EngL 33: 1699-1720; Giannis and Kolter ( 1993). Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl.. 32: 1244- 1267; Hudson. D.
  • Peptidomimetics or peptide analogs also include peptides wherein the N-terminus is derivatized for example to a -NXX, group, to a -NXC(0)X group, to a ⁇ NXC(0)OX group, to a »NXS(0) 2 X group, to a ⁇ NHC(0)NHX group where X and X, are hydrogen or lower alkyl with the proviso that X and X, are not both hydrogen, to a succinimide group, to a benzyloxycarbonyl-NH-(CBZ-NH-) group, to a benzyloxycarbonyl-NH ⁇ group having from 1 to 3 substituents on the phenyl ring selected from the group consisting of lower alkyl, lower alkoxy, chloro, and bromo, peptides wherein the C terminus is derivatized to — C(0)X 2 where X 2 is selected from the group consisting of lower alkoxy, and —
  • Free functional groups on a nucleoside peptide molecule may be capped using the same or different chemical reactive groups used for a spacer monomer unit coupling to nucleoside monomer units.
  • Examples of cap monomer units include ureas, thioureas, carbamates. and amide residues, which may be part of aromatic rings, non-aromatic rings, heterocyclics, carbocyclics, or fused ring systems.
  • Reactive derivatives of naturally occurring alkaloids such as swainsonine or castanospermine may also be used as cap monomers.
  • cap monomer units examples include: benzoyl chloride, benzenesulfonyl isocyanate, 4-toluenesulfonyl isocyanate, 2-furonyl chloride, (R)- ⁇ - methylbenzyl isocyanate, 4-(trifluoromethylthio)phenyl isocyanate, 2-methoxycarbonyl, phenyl isocyanate, 4-morpholine carbonyl chloride, l -isothiocyanato-4-(trans-4-octylcyclohexyl) benezene, 3- (trifluoromethyl)phenyi isocyanate, 1 -adamantanecarbonyl chloride, 4-chlorobenezene sulfonyl isocyanate, quinoxay chloride, 2-thiophenecarbonyl chloride, 2-naphthyl isocyanate, 2-thiopheneacetyl chloride
  • cap monomers that can be used to cap a free NH and form part of the nucleoside peptide molecules include but are not limited to methyl (Me), formyl (CHO), ethyl (Et), acetyl (Ac), t-butyl (t-bu), anisyl, trifluoroaceryl (Tfa), benzoyl (Bz), 4- methylbenzyl (Meb), thioanizyl, thiocresyl, benzyloxymethyl, 4-nitrophenyl (Pnp), benzyloxycarbonyl (Z), 2-nitrobenzoyl (NBz), 2-nitrophenylsulphenyl (Nps), 4-toluenesulphonyl (Tosyl, Tos), pentafluorophenyl (Pfp), diphenylmethyl (Dpm), 2-chlorobenzyloxycarbonyl (Cl-Z), 2,4,5- trichlorophenyl, 2-bromo
  • Sugar transition state analogues may be coupled to the nucleoside peptide molecules in a position in space close to where a sugar-phosphate bond would be cleaved in a corresponding sugar nucleotide donor.
  • nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention have the formula I:
  • X is H, -COOH, -OS0 3 H, (CH 2 )qS0 3 H where q is 0 or 1, or -OP0 3 H
  • R represents (Y) m where Y is a substituted amide group (e.g. an amide linked amino acid residue) and m is 1-3, Z' and Z are the same or different and represent hydroxyl or alkoxy, or Z' and Z together form an acetonide group, and wherein free NH 2 groups in the compound of the formula I are preferably capped with the cap monomers mentioned herein, preferably with Fmoc or Boc.
  • nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention have the formula I wherein X is H, -COOH, -OS0 3 H, or (CH 2 )qS0 3 H where q is 0 or 1, Z and Z' are both hydroxyl or together form an acetonide group, R represents -NHCOR 1 , wherein R 1 represents
  • R is halogen
  • R 10 is halogen, -N(C 2 H 5 )CH 2 CH(CH 3 )OH, or -NHCOCH(CH 3 ) 2 and wherein free amino groups are protected with a cap monomer.
  • X is -COOH
  • R represents -NHCOR 1 wherein R 1 represents -CHR 3 R 4 wherein R 3 is hydrogen, and R 4 is (CH 2 ) n R 8
  • n 0 to 5, preferably 1 to 4, R 8 is halogen, R 9 is alkoxy, halogen, or alkyl,
  • R 10 is halogen, -N(C 2 H 5 )CH 2 CH(CH 3 )OH, or -NHCOCH(CH 3 ) 2 .
  • a compound of the formula I wherein , X is -COOH, and R represents -NHCOR 1 wherein R 1 represents -CHR 3 R 4 wherein R 3 represents -NH 2 , and R 4
  • R 5 is halogen, alkyl or alkoxy, -CH 2 N(CH 3 )CH 2 CH 2 R 6 wherein R 6 is halogen, -CH 2 N(C 2 H 5 )CH 2 CH(CH 3 )OH,
  • a compound of the formula I wherein X is -OS0 3 H, or (CH 2 )qS0 3 H where q is 0 or 1, R represents -NHCOR 1 wherein R 1 represents -CHR 3 R 4 wherein R 3 represents -NH 2 ⁇ and R 4 is
  • nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I is provided wherein X
  • alkyl refers to a branched or linear hydrocarbon radical, typically containing from 1 through 10 carbon atoms, preferably 1 through 5. Typical alkyl groups include but are not limited to methyl, ethyl, 1 -propyl, 2-propyl, 1 -butyl, 2-butyl, tert-butyl, or pentyl, preferably methyl or ethyl.
  • alkoxy refers to an alkyl linked to the parent molecular moiety through an oxygen atom.
  • alkoxy groups include O-methyl i.e. methoxy, O-allyl i.e. allyloxy, O-propyl i.e. propoxy, O-butyl i.e. butoxy, and the like, preferably methoxy or allyloxy.
  • halo or halogen, alone or in combination, refers to a member of the family fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine.
  • nucleoside peptide molecules are shown in Tables 3, 4, and 5.
  • the stereochemistry of chiral carbon atoms in the nucleoside monomer unit, spacer monomer unit, or cap monomer unit can independently be in the R or S configuration, or a mixture of the two.
  • amino acids of the spacer monomer can be in the L-or D-configuration, resulting in the same amino acid, varying only in its stereochemistry.
  • the present invention encompasses a nucleoside peptide molecule of the invention as a mixture of diastereomers, as well as in the form of an individual diastereomer, and the present invention encompasses a nucleoside peptide molecule as a mixture of enantiomers, as well as in the form of an individual enantiomer.
  • All optical isomers and racemic forms thereof of the nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention are contemplated herein, and the nucleoside peptide molecules shown herein are intended to encompass all possible optical isomers of the compounds so depicted.
  • the formation of diastereomers may be carried out pre or post spacer attachment to the nucleoside monomer unit by using L and/or D ammo acids during synthesis or by racemizing chiral centers after spacer attachment or construction with base
  • Nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention may be present as pharmaceutically acceptable salts
  • pharmaceutically acceptable salts encompasses those salts that form by standard acid- base reactions with basic groups and organic or inorganic acids, or acidic groups and bases
  • acids include hydrochloric, sulfu ⁇ c, phosphoric, acetic, succimc, citric, lactic, maleic. fuma ⁇ c, palmitic, cholic, pamoic, mucic, D-glutamic, d-campho ⁇ c, gluta ⁇ c, phtha c, tarta ⁇ c, launc, steanc, salicychc, methanesulfonic, benezenesulfonic,sorbic, benzoic.
  • bases include LiOH, NaOH, KOK and Ca(CH 2 )
  • Basic amino acids e g glycme, ornithine, histidine, phenylglycine, lysine, and arginine
  • a spacer monomer unit may be in protonated forms Preparation of a Combinatorial Library
  • a monomer unit is chemically conjugated l e covalently linked or coupled, to an adjoining monomer unit or building block to prepare a combinatorial library of the invention
  • a monomer unit is altered, for example, upon reaction to form a covalent bond, the monomer can lose a water molecule, or can undergo formation of a urea or carbamate group
  • solid phase and solution phase chemistries may be used to synthesize a combinatorial library of the invention
  • the building blocks or monomers used in the compounds contained in the library of the invention may be assembled "backwards" ⁇ e the last building block added to the 'growing chain" may be analogous to the 5 terminal end of a peptide or polypeptide
  • the undine building block or monome ⁇ c unit may be chemically conjugated
  • a combinatorial library of the invention where the reactive group on the nucleoside monomer unit is an amme may be prepared using an acetonide, or other suitable protecting groups to temporarily protect chemically active sites
  • a library based on undine structures may be produced using a 5'-deoxy-5'-am ⁇ no-2',3'-0- ⁇ sopropyl ⁇ d ⁇ nylund ⁇ ne template
  • the template may be prepared by acetonide blockage of the 2'- and 3 '-hydroxyl groups, activation of the 5'hydroxy using mesylation, tosylation, or t ⁇ flation, subsequent reaction with sodium azide, and reduction (for example, see Figures 1 to 4)
  • a spacer monomer unit comprising an amino acid, dipeptide, or t ⁇ peptide which is suitably protected, e g N-t-butyloxycarbonyl (Boc), or N-9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl(Fmoc)-protected, may be coupled with
  • the invention also contemplates intermediates used in the processes of the invention, including nucleoside peptide molecules of the combinatorial libraries of the invention having a protected hvdroxy in the heterocyclic am e base and/or which may be blocked at the 2' or 3' hydroxyls
  • the spacer monomer unit may be coupled to the nucleoside monomer unit using a synthetic strategy that consists of three chemical steps and two purification steps, all of which can be automated Examples of reaction schemes for adding the spacer monomer unit are shown in Figures 5 and 6
  • the reactions may be performed in deep well ( 1 or 2 mL), 96-well-formatm ⁇ crot ⁇ tre plates
  • the first step is to couple Boc- protected amino acids, dipeptides or tnpeptides to the undine template in free base form This is followed by concomitant N-deprotection and acetonide deblockage using an excess of TFA
  • the TFA salts are neutralized by ion exchange slurrying using a PolyfiltronicsTM unifilter plate (in 96 well format), allowing for the generation of free amine residues
  • the free amine groups are capped for example with isocyanates, isothiocyanates carboxylic acids, suifonyl chlorides, and acyl chlorides to give five libraries of
  • FIG. 7 An alternative reaction scheme for adding spacer monomer units using an Fmoc strategy is shown in Figure 7
  • the reactions may be performed in deep well (1 or 2mL), 96-well format microtitre plates if desired
  • the first step is to couple Fmoc-protected amino acids, dipeptides or tnpeptides to the free amme group of the undine monomer template This is followed by Fmoc deprotection with morpho ne in DMF as solvent
  • This method liberates the free terminal amme without removing the isopropylidene protecting group
  • No neutralization step is necessary and morphohne is easily removed by evaporation under reduced pressure
  • the terminal ammes are then capped as required, as described above
  • the acetonide protecting group can be removed from all or selected capped or uncapped undine peptides a final reaction sequence by treatment with TFA at room temperature followed by evaporation of reagents and solvent under reduced pressure (see Figure 8)
  • a combinatorial library of the invention where an amide group links a nucleoside monomer unit and a spacer monomer unit may be prepared by forming a compound of the formula I where R represents -NHCOCHR J R 4 wherein R J is NH 2 using the method as described in N P Damonies et al J Am Chem Soc 93, 3812, 1971 The free amino form of the compound is subjected to condensation with a corresponding ester of R J in aqueous DMF in the presence of N-methyl morpholine at an appropriate temperature
  • Other reactive esters such as N-hydroxy succinimidyl, hvdroxybenzotriazole, or pentafluorophenyl esters, or other reactive esters commonly used in peptide synthesis may also be used.
  • synthesis of a compound of the formula I where R 4 is (CH 2 ) ⁇ R 8 where n is 2 and R 8 is halogen (compound A in Table 3) can be achieved by using the methyl ester of 1
  • a combinatorial library containing the selected compounds shown in Tables 4 and 5 where X is sulphate can be synthesized by a similar condensation of an ester with a free amme
  • Predetermined compounds in the combinatorial library where C-5 of a undine has different alkyl and aryl groups may be prepared by mercuration of commercially available UDP with mercuric acetate to give UDP-C-5-mercu ⁇ c acetate, which on treatment with an appropriate alkene compound in the presence of potassium tetrachloropalladate produces the corresponding C-5-alkene derivative On selective reduction, these compounds give C-5-alkyl compounds
  • This type of denvatization is known as the Heck reaction and it can be carried out in a variety of ways known in the art (Ryabov, Synthesis (1985) 233-252, and Heck, Org React ( 1982) 27 345-390)
  • a transition state analogue of a sugar which is transferred by a sugar nucleotide donor may be coupled to a nucleoside peptide molecule of the invention
  • a GlcNAc cation analogue can be generated, and prepared in a form that would allow it to be coupled to a undine ribose molecule of the invention
  • the combinatorial library of the invention contains putative inhibitors of carbohydrate processing enzymes Inhibitors with appropriate selectivity and activity against a particular carbohydrate processing enzyme may be selected using conventional bioassays and the bioassays described herein Bioassays may be adapted for high throughput screening incorporating automation and robotics to enable testing thousands to millions of compounds in a relatively short time
  • Preliminary screening of 5408 compounds from a library of the invention revealed that 2-3% of the compounds had inhibitory activity in conventional core 2 GlcNAc-T, GlcNAc-TV, and GlcNAc-TI assays
  • the methods designed by the present inventors described herein use simple, and rapid functional assays that can identify one or more active ingredients in tested pools without the need for a long deconvolution process
  • the assays are used in robotics systems that can handle large numbers of samples for proportioning, mixing, and sample-handling
  • the invention therefore makes available robotics that can perform multiple chemical reactions at variable temperatures, and subsequently handle work up and characterization of bioactive leads
  • the selection means enable identification of active compounds within the combinatorial libraries that can generate affinity enrichment or affinity selection, and this enrichment and selection may be followed by mass spectroscopic identification of any bioactive compounds
  • the present invention contemplates a solid-phase bioassay for identifying a compound in a combinatorial library of the invention having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme including glycosyltransferases or glycosidases
  • the method is particularly useful for drug screening
  • the solid-phase bioassay involves coupling a carbohydrate acceptor for the carbohydrate processing enzyme to a polymer and coating onto a carrier or support
  • a carbohydrate processing enzyme, a sugar nucleotide donor labeled with a detectable substance, and a test compound are added, and the detectable change produced by the detectable substance is measured
  • polymers to which an acceptor may be coupled include polyacrylamide
  • the carrier or support may be for example nitrocellulose, or glass, gabbros, or magnetite
  • the support material may have any possible configuration including spherical (e g bead) cylindrical (e g inside surface of a test tube or well, or the external surface of a rod), or flat (e g sheet, test strip)
  • detectable substances include, but are not limited to, radioisotopes (e g , ' H, 14 C, j5 S, l25 I,
  • the detectable substance is a radioactive material, most preferably tritium
  • a carbohydrate processing enzyme used in the method may be obtained using conventional extraction methods from natural sources, it may be a recombinant enzyme, or it may be obtained from commercial sources
  • the assay involves coupling carbohydrate acceptors to a polymer (e g polyacrylamide) and coating onto a carrier, such as the surface of 96 well plastic plates
  • a polymer e g polyacrylamide
  • a glycosyltransferase assay can be used to identify inhibitors of a variety of carbohydrate processing enzymes, including the enzymes described herein, preferably core 2 GlcNAc-T, GlcNAc-TI and GlcNAc-TV
  • L-PHA is a lectin which recognizes tn- and tetra- antennary N-linked oligosaccharides carrying the structure (Gal ⁇ l 4GlcNAc ⁇ l ,6)GaI ⁇ l,4- GlcNAc ⁇ l.2Man ⁇ ), thus representing a valid probe for detection of ⁇ 1 6 branched complex-type oligosaccharides
  • These structures are associated with tumor progression and appear on malignant cells (Dennis et al , 1986) [for example the murine lymphoreticular, highly metastatic, tumor model MDAY- D2 line (VanderElst and Dennis 1991)] Reduction and or truncation of cell surface N-hnked carbohydrate chains in MDAY-D2 cells is directly correlated with decreasing levels of L-
  • N-linked oligosacchande processing or 'N-linked oligosacchande processing pathway refer to the biosynthetic pathway for the in vivo synthesis of glycoproteins with N-hnked oligosaccharides N-hnked oligosaccharides are linked to the amide N in the sidechain of Asn in the consensus sequence Asn-X-Ser/Thr of the protein moiety, where X can be any amino acid
  • the method of the invention can be particularly applied to identify compounds that inhibit complex-type N-hnked oligosaccharides, in particular ⁇ 1 ,6- branched complex-tvpe oligosaccharides associated with tumor growth and metastasis
  • N-linked oligosacchande processing involves the synthesis of a precursor molecule, transfer of the precursor to Asn by o gosaccharyltransferase followed by further processing by membrane-bound glucosidases and endoplasmic reticulum 1,2-mannos ⁇ dase
  • a fully automated enzymatic method is contemplated that is based on measurement of alkaline phosphatase activity.
  • the method is based on the observation that the number of cells and their level of alkaline phosphatase activity are closely correlated.
  • the method employs a colorimetric assay to monitor cell proliferation of transformed cells after L-PHA treatment.
  • the reaction mixture is directly added to cells growing in their own medium.
  • the reaction is linear with time in a wide time interval (5-180 min), and the Km value of the enzyme for the substrate para-nitrophenylphosphate is relatively low (0.81 mM).
  • Incubation time and substrate concentration can be changed in order to modulate the velocity of the reaction and adjust the protocol, for automation and timing purposes, to the number of samples.
  • Use of a robotic platform also allows simultaneous processing of large numbers of samples, e.g. thirty-six 96-well plates.
  • an automated method for testing a compound for its ability to inhibit N- linked oligosaccharide processing comprising (a) incubating the compound with cells expressing N- linked oligosaccharides (preferably ⁇ 1 ,6 branched, complex-type oligosaccharides) in the presence of L-PHA, and measuring alkaline phosphatase activity; and (b) comparing to a control in the absence of the compound wherein higher alkaline phosphatase activity indicates that the compound has the ability to inhibit N-linked oligosaccharide processing.
  • N- linked oligosaccharides preferably ⁇ 1 ,6 branched, complex-type oligosaccharides
  • the method may be used to identify compounds which inhibit all steps in the N-linked oligosaccharide pathway prior to ⁇ l .-4 Gal-transferases, including compounds that inhibit the carbohydrate processing enzymes described herein, in particular N- acetylglycosaminyltransferases, including N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases I, II and V.
  • the method may also be used to identify compounds that inhibit Golgi ⁇ -mannosidases.
  • the automated method of the invention can generally be used to identify antagonists of cell growth inhibitors, such as TGF- ⁇ , IL-l ⁇ , TNF ⁇ , and IFN. Therefore, the invention broadly contemplates a method comprising (a) reacting a test compound with cells expressing N-linked oligosaccharides in the presence of a cell growth inhibitor; (b) measuring alkaline phosphatase activity
  • Cells which can be used in the methods of the invention include MDAY-D2, L1210, melanoma tumor cells, and human tumor cells such as S W 480, LS 174T, HT-29, WiDr, T2, MDA-231 , MCF7, BT-20, Hs578T, K562, Hs578T, SK-BR-3, CY 6T, MDA-468, H23. H157, H358, H1334, HI 155, H28, H460, Hmesol, H I 87, H510A, N417, H I 46. HI 092, H82 (Restifo. N. P. et al, J. Exper. Med. 177:265-272, 1993).
  • the cell lines may contain either constitutive or inducible enzyme activity such as osteoblastic cell lines.
  • Cell proliferation is measured by measuring alkaline phosphatase activity.
  • Alkaline phosphatase may be measured using conventional methods for example by using para- nitrophenylphosphate as a substrate and measuring absorbance at about 405nm.
  • the conditions for carrying out the method will be selected having regard to the nature of the compound and the cells employed. For example, if the cells are MDAY-D2 tumor cells a concentration
  • the MDAY-D2 cells are generally cultured for about 10 to 30 hours, preferably 16 to 20 hours, followed by addition of L-PHA at a concentration of about 50 to 150 ⁇ g/mL, preferably 100 ⁇ g/mL.
  • the alkaline phosphatase assay mixture may contain a buffer e.g. diethanolamine buffer, and para-nitrophenylphosphate at an initial concentration of about 1.5 to 4 mM, preferably 2 to 3 mM, most preferably 2.5 mM.
  • Small molecule inhibitors with appropriate selectivity and activity against a particular carbohydrate processing enzyme can be selected from the combinatorial libraries of the invention using high throughput screening bioassays.
  • the selected small molecule inhibitors will have valuable pharmacological properties.
  • the inhibitors will be useful in the treatment and prophylaxis of tumor growth and metastasis of tumors.
  • Anti-metastatic effects of inhibitors can be demonstrated using a lung colonization assay. For example, melanoma cells treated with an inhibitor may be injected into mice and the ability of the melanoma cells to colonize the lungs of the mice may be examined by counting tumor nodules on the lungs after death. Suppression of tumor growth in mice by the inhibitor administered orally or intravenously may be examined by measuring tumor volume.
  • a small molecule inhibitor can have particular application in the prevention of tumor recurrence after surgery i.e. as an adjuvant therapy.
  • a small molecule inhibitor can be especially useful in the treatment of various forms of neoplasia such as leukemias. lymphomas. melanomas, adenomas, sarcomas, and carcinomas of solid tissues in patients.
  • the small molecule inhibitors can be used for treating malignant melanoma, pancreatic cancer, cervico-uterine cancer, ovarian cancer, cancer of the kidney such as metastatic renal cell carcinoma, stomach, lung, rectum, breast, bowel, gastric, liver, thyroid, head and neck cancers such as unresectable head and neck cancers, lymphangitis carcinamatosis, cancers of the cervix, breast, salivary gland, leg, tongue, lip, bile duct, pelvis, mediastinum, urethra, bronchogenic, bladder, esophagus and colon, non-small cell lung cancer, and Kaposi's Sarcoma which is a form of cancer associated with HIV-infected patients with Acquired Immune Def
  • a small molecule inhibitor of the present invention can be used to treat immunocompromised subjects.
  • they can be used in a subject infected with HIV, or other viruses or infectious agents including bacteria, fungi, and parasites, in a subject undergoing bone marrow transplants, and in subjects with chemical or tumor-induced immune suppression.
  • a small molecule inhibitor can be used as hemorestorative agents and in particular to stimulate bone marrow cell proliferation, in particular following chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
  • the myeloprohferative activity of an inhibitor of the invention may be determined by injecting the inhibitor into mice, sacrificing the mice, removing bone marrow cells and measuring the ability of the inhibitor to stimulate bone marrow proliferation by directly counting bone marrow cells and by measuring clonogenic progenitor cells in methylcellulose assays
  • the inhibitors can also be used as chemoprotectants and in particular to protect mucosal epithelium following chemotherapy
  • a small molecule inhibitor of the invention also can be used as an antiviral agent in particular on membrane enveloped viruses such as retroviruses, influenza viruses, cytomegalo viruses and herpes viruses
  • a small molecule inhibitor can also be used to treat bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections
  • a small molecule inhibitor can be used to prevent or treat infections caused by the following Neisseria species such as Neisseria meningitidis.
  • Chlamvdia species such as Chlamvdia pneumomae Chlamydia psittaci Chlamvdia tnchomatis Eschertchia colt Haemophilus species such as Haemophilus influenza, Yersima enterocohtica Salmonella species such as S tvphmiurium, Shigella species such as Shigella flexnen.
  • Streptococcus species such as S agalactiae and 5 pneumomae
  • Bacilllus species such as Bacillus subtilis Branhamella catarrhalts, Borreha burgdorfer Pseudomonas aeruginosa Coxiella burnetti Campvlobacter species such as C hyoilei, Helicobacter pylori, and, Klebsiella species such as Klebsiella pneumomae
  • a small molecule inhibitor can also be used in the treatment of inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, and atherosclerosis
  • a small molecule inhibitor can also be used to augment the anti-cancer effects of agents such as ⁇ nterleuk ⁇ n-2 and poly-IC.
  • agents such as ⁇ nterleuk ⁇ n-2 and poly-IC.
  • to augment natural killer and macrophage tumo ⁇ cidal activity induce cytokine s>nthes ⁇ s and secretion, enhance expression of LAK and HLA class I specific antigens, activate protein kinase C stimulate bone marrow cell proliferation including hematopoietic progenitor cell proliferation, and increase engraftment efficiency and colony-forming unit activity, to confer protection against chemotherapy and radiation therap) (e g chemoprotective and radioprotective agents), and to accelerate recovery of bone marrow cellulanty particularly when used in combination with chemical agents commonly used in the treatment of human diseases including cancer and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
  • a small molecule inhibitor can be used as a chemoprotectant in combination with anti-cancer agents including doxorubicin, 5-
  • Small molecule inhibitors can be converted using customary methods into pharmaceutical compositions
  • the pharmaceutical compositions contain the inhibitors either alone or together with other active substances
  • Such pharmaceutical compositions can be for oral, topical, rectal, parenteral, local, inhalant, or mtracerebral use They are therefore in solid or semiso d form, for example pills, tablets, creams, gelatin capsules, capsules, suppositories, soft gelatin capsules, liposomes (see for example, U S Patent No 5,376,452), gels, membranes, and tubelets
  • parenteral and mtracerebral uses those forms for intramuscular or subcutaneous administration can be used, or forms for infusion or intravenous or mtracerebral injection can be used, and can therefore be prepared as solutions of the inhibitors or as powders of the inhibitors to be mixed with one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients or diluents, suitable for the aforesaid uses and w ith an osmola ⁇
  • compositions can be prepared by per se known methods for the preparation of pharmaceutically acceptable compositions which can be administered to patients, and such that an effective quantity of the active substance is combined in a mixture with a pharmaceutically acceptable vehicle Suitable vehicles are desc ⁇ bed, for example, in Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences (Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, Mack Publishing Company, Easton, Pa , USA 1985)
  • the pharmaceutical compositions include albeit not exclusively, the inhibitors in association with one or more pharmaceutically acceptable vehicles or diluents, and contained in buffered solutions with a suitable pH and iso-osmotic with the physiological fluids
  • An inhibitor can be indicated as a therapeutic agent either alone or in conjunction with other therapeutic agents or other forms ot treatment (e g chemotherapy or radiotherapy)
  • An inhibitor can be used to enhance activation of macrophages, T cells, and NK cells in the treatment of cancer and immunosuppressive diseases
  • an inhibitor can be used in combination with anti- proliferative agents, antimicrobial agents, immunostimulatory agents, or anti-inflammatones
  • an inhibitor can be used in combination with anti-viral and/or anti-pro ferative agents, such as Th l cytokines including ⁇ nterleukm-2, ⁇ nterleuk ⁇ n-12.
  • compositions containing small molecule inhibitors can be administered for prophylactic and/or therapeutic treatments
  • compositions are administered to a patient already suffering from a disease or condition as described above, in an amount sufficient to cure or at least alleviate the symptoms of the disease and its complications An amount adequate to accomplish this is defined as a "therapeutically effective dose" Amounts effective for this use will depend on the seventy of the disease, the weight and general state of the patient, the nature of the administration route, the nature of the formulation, and the time or interval at which it is administered
  • compositions containing small molecule inhibitors are administered to a patient susceptible to or otherwise at risk of a particular disease Such an amount is defined to be a ' prophylactically effective dose"
  • a prophylactically effective dose In this use the precise amounts depend on the patient's state of health and weight, the nature of the administration route, the nature of the formulation, and the time or interval at which it is administered
  • the crude mesylate (obtained from step B above) was dissolved in DMF (400 mL, reagent grade) and stirred at 60°C with sodium azide (34.6g, 532 mmol) for 12 hrs until complete consumption of the mesylate was observed by TLC (TLC 7:3, ethyl acetate: hexane). The mixture was filtered through a Celite bed. The filtrate was evaporated to dryness. The residue was dissolved in ethyl acetate (2.0 L) and washed three times with water (3 X 250 L). The organic layer was dried over MgS0 4 and evaporated under reduced pressure at 30°C.
  • Free amine ( Figure 5) was dissolved in dichloromethane (250 mL) and WSC.HC1 [l-ethyl-3- (3'-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide .HC1, 1.2 eq] was added. To this clear solution, N-t- butoxycarbonyl protected amino acids (1.0 eq) were added and stirred under argon for 1-3 h. The reaction was monitored by TLC (7: 93, MeOH/CHCl 3 ).
  • Uridine peptides ( Figure 6) were treated separately with TFA/CHC1 3 /H 2 0 (3:4: 1 ) at room temperature for 12 hours. Excess reagent and solvent were evaporated under reduced pressure. The residue was dissolved in methanol, treated with OH ' resin until neutral, filtered, and evaporated to dryness.
  • uridine monopeptide and dipeptide derivatives were treated separately with capping reagents (acyl chloride, isocyanate, and thioisocyanate, 1.2 eq) and diisopropylethyl amine (1.5 eq) in DMF at room temperature. After 12h, solvent was removed and the residues were dissolved in methanol. These solutions were treated with aminomethylated polystyrene resin for 48 hours to quench excess capping reagent. Mixtures were filtered, evaporated, and dissolved in DMSO.
  • capping reagents acyl chloride, isocyanate, and thioisocyanate, 1.2 eq
  • diisopropylethyl amine 1.5 eq
  • N-t-Boc and N-FMOC-deprotected dipeptides ( 1 eq) were also capped with various carboxylic acid caps (1.05-1.2 eq) in the presence of HBTU (1.05-1.2 eq) in DMF.
  • the solvent was evaporated under reduced pressure (temp ⁇ 60°).
  • the residues were dissolved in 8/8/1 [MeCN/MeOH/H 2 0], and then filtered individually through a pad of basic alumina in a 96-well format using polytronics filter plates. The solvents were again evaporated under reduced pressure ( ⁇ 40°), and the residues diluted in DMSO for storage and testing.
  • T transferase A solid-phase glycosyltransferase assay was developed for drug screening.
  • Glycosyltransferases catalyze the formation of giycosydic linkages between monosaccharides donated by sugar-nucleotide. and specific oligosaccharide acceptors.
  • the solid-phase assay was illustrated for core 2 GlcNAc-T and can be adapted for other glycosyltransferases.
  • the assay utilizes multivalent oligosaccharide acceptors linked to polymer coated plastic plates and thereby eliminates the need for chromatographic separation of product.
  • Gal ⁇ l-3GalNAc ⁇ -0(CH 2 ) 3 S(CH 2 ) 2 NH 2 (2) (core 2 GlcNAc-T acceptor) and [GlcNAc( ⁇ l -2)]Man( ⁇ l-6)Glc( ⁇ -0(CH 2 ) 3 S(CH 2 )NH 2 ) were prepared from the corresponding allyl glycoside following a procedure described by Roy and Tropper (R. Roy and F.D. Tropper. J. Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun. 1058 ( 1988); Glycoconjugate J. 5:203 ( 1988)).
  • Glycopolymer syntheses Poly[N-(acryloyloxy)succinimide] (1 ) was first treated at room temperature with the amine-terminated T-antigen disaccharide 2 in DMSO ( 16 h) to provide a core copolymer containing one sugar residue for every ten N-substituted acrvlamide residues. The active ester- containing polymer was then treated at room temperature for three hours with excess primary amines (ammonia, methylamine, ethylamine, or propylamine) to give four different copolymers 3-6 having the same comonomer ratios but differing by the lipophilicity of the copolymer backbones.
  • primary amines ammonia, methylamine, ethylamine, or propylamine
  • glycopolymers were then purified by size exclusion chromatography over BioGel P- 10 using water as eluent.
  • disaccharide 2 was treated with methacryloyl chloride and the resulting monomer was copolymerized with methacrylamide to provide copolymer 8, while direct copolymerization of allyl glycoside precursor of 2 with acrvlamide gave copolymer 10.
  • copolymer acceptors 11-14 for GlcNAc-T V were prepared using the same core pNAS 1 and molar ratios of acrylamide:sugar of 10: 1 ( Figure 10).
  • Recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T A truncated form of core 2 GlcNAc-T cDNA, lacking 37 amino acids from the N-terminus was prepared by PCR.
  • the truncated cDNA was cloned in-frame into pPROTA vector (Sanchez-Lopez et al., J. Biol. Chem. 263. 1 1892- 1 18991988) for expression as a secreted protein A chimeric protein.
  • the expression vector was co-transfected into CHO cells, along with pSV2neo, in a 10: 1 molar ratio, using a calcium phosphate method. Cells were cultured in the presence of 800 ⁇ g/mL of G418.
  • the representative clone 614 C2 showed stable expression of core 2 GlcNAc-T activity, and was selected for enzyme production
  • the cells were routinely propagated in MEM medium containing 5% Fetal Bovine Serum and G418 (0 2 g/mL) IgG-Sepharose Fast Flow Tm beads (Pharmacia Biotech) were added in a ratio of 5 ⁇ l of a 50% bead slurry, 2 5 ⁇ l of 2 M T ⁇ s»HCl pH 8 0, and 5 ⁇ l of 10% Tween-20 per mL of culture medium Following incubation on a rocking platform at 4°C for 20 h, the beads were collected by cent ⁇ fugation, washed with 10 volumes of TST buffer (50 mM T ⁇ s «HCl pH 8 0 150 mM NaCl, 0 05% Tween-20) and 2 volumes of 5 mM NH 4 Ac pH 5
  • T he HTS core 2 GlcNAc-T assay consisted of 20 ⁇ l of test compound, 20 ul of 3x assay buffer consisting of 90 mM MES pH 6 7 10 mM EDTA (Sigma), 0 0075 mM UDP-GlcNAc (Sigma) and 0 1 ⁇ Ci of UDP-[ ⁇ ]Glc Ac (16 Ci/mmol, Toronto Research Cnemicals) and 20 ⁇ l of recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T (containing 8- 10 ⁇ U/ ⁇ l) per reaction in 96 well plates
  • the enzyme and the 3x buffer were routinely combined and 40 ⁇ l of the enzyme-buffer mix was added to the wells following the addition of the test compounds After incubating the plates at 25°C for 60 min, the reactions were stopped by adding 175 ⁇ l of water to each well, aspirating the contents and washing 4 times with 190 ul water The radioactive signal was measured using a MicroBeta plate counter (Wal
  • HTS assays were run on a Beckman integrated robotic platform using a Biomek 200 pipetting station and Zymar rotating robotic arm PanLabs (Seattle, WA) supplied a collection of 30,000 bacterial and fungal extracts in 96 well plates The dried extracts were resuspended in DMSO, and diluted into water at 0.15% DMSO for the core 2 GlcNAc-T HTS.
  • the core 2 GlcNAc-T solution phase assay mixture was similar to that used in earlier studies (Yousefi et al., J.Biol.Chem. 266: 1772-1783, 1991 ; Williams et al.. J.Biol.Chem. 255: 1 1253-1 1261 , 1980) but was adapted for automation on the Beckman robotic platform.
  • test extract 10 ⁇ l of test extract, 10 ⁇ l of 3x assay buffer (90 mM MES pH 6.7, 10 M EDTA, 3 mM Gal ⁇ l-3GalNAc ⁇ -pNp as acceptor, 3 M UDP-GlcNAc (Sigma) and 0.1 ⁇ Ci of UDP- [ 3 H]GlcNAc ( 16 Ci/mmol; Toronto Research Chemicals), and 10 ⁇ l of recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T enzyme (4-5 ⁇ U activity) was added to wells of the titre plate. Reactions in a total volume 30 ⁇ l were incubated for 1-2 h at 37 C and stopped by adding 200 ⁇ l cold water.
  • 3x assay buffer 90 mM MES pH 6.7, 10 M EDTA, 3 mM Gal ⁇ l-3GalNAc ⁇ -pNp as acceptor, 3 M UDP-GlcNAc (Sigma) and 0.1 ⁇ Ci of UDP- [ 3 H]GlcNA
  • the disaccharide acceptor Gal ⁇ l-3GalNAc ⁇ -R where R is either octylmethyl or paranitophenyl has been used routinely in solution core 2 GlcNAc-T assays where UDP-[ ⁇ ]GlcNAc is the sugar-nucleotide donor.
  • the product, Gal ⁇ l-3([ 3 H]GlcNAc ⁇ l-6)GalNAc ⁇ -R is captured on C i solid support, eluted with ethanol, and measured in a ⁇ -counter ( Yousefi et al, J.Biol.Chem. 266: 1772- 1783, 1991).
  • the water-soluble glycopolymer acceptors (3-8, 10, and 11-14 Figure 9) used in the solid-phase glycosyltransferase assay are polyvalent substrates composed of N-substituted polyacrylamide backbones containing one disaccharide Gal ⁇ l- 3GalNAc ⁇ -0(CH 2 ) 3 S(CH 2 ) 2 (2) or trisaccharide [GlcNAc( ⁇ l -2)]Man( ⁇ l -6)Glc( ⁇ -0(CH 2 ) 3 S(CH 2 )) residues for every ten acrylamide backbone monomers.
  • the viscosity-average molecular weight M v of the core polymer was determined to be 42.1 kDa based on polyacrylamide derived from 1 by treatment with aqueous ammonium alone.
  • the ratio of sugar to acrylamide of one to ten was determined using high field H-NMR spectroscopy and was based on previous optimization experiments using analogous glycopolymers in enzyme-linked lectin assays (ELLA) (Roy, Trends in Glycoscience and Glycotech. 8:79-99 1996).
  • the copolymer backbones were modified with various alkylamines to enhance their lipophilicity and thus, increase their adsorption behaviors to the surface of the polystyrene microtiter plates.
  • Copolymers 6 and 14 having the most lipophilic N-propylacrylamide backbones, were about eight times more sensitive than either N-ethyl (5, 13) or acrylamide (3, 11) copolymers while copolymers 4 and 12, having an N-methyl substituent, were the least effective coating acceptor.
  • Copolymer 10 containing a shorter allyl spacer was also found unsuitable for the enzymatic glycosylation, presumably because of the inaccessibility of the GalNAc residues in the enzyme's active site.
  • copolymers 7 (co-biotin) or 8 (co-methacrylamide) provided either poor coating or poor enzymatic glycosylation.
  • Biotin-containing copolymer 7 was initially designed to serve as coating substrate after capture by streptavidin/avidin pre-coating.
  • variable results were observed with different batches of plastic plates.
  • a number of pre-wash solutions were tested for their ability to improve the consistency of the core 2 GlcNAc-T reaction. Pre-washing the plastic with organic solvents improved the signal by 2-4 fold and eliminated variability between different lots of plates.
  • the sugar-nucleotide concentration is adjusted to optimize the detection of radioactive product and is also below K m concentrations.
  • a time course and titration of UDP-GlcNAc was performed at 37°C.
  • the reaction went to completion in less than 5 minutes.
  • the core 2 GlcNAc- T reaction product accumulated in a time-dependent manner for 30-60 minutes.
  • the maximal product formed was 6- 10 pmoles per well, and when 2.5 ⁇ M UDP-GlcNAc was used in the reaction, this represented approximately 4% utilization of the sugar-nucleotide donor.
  • these conditions (2 5 ⁇ M UDP-GlcNAc, 200 uU enzyme) were then further tested at room temperature (approximately 20°C) Under these conditions, product accumulation was found to be linear with time for approximately 60 min.
  • Core 2 GlcNAc-T high-throughput screen (HTS) ofmicrobial extracts A microbial library of 30,000 extracts was subjected to HTS using the core 2 GlcNAc-T solid-phase assay as the primary screen (le glycopolymer 3) Normalized results from a typical run ot 1 ,600 assays are shown in Figure 1 1
  • the signal to noise was 20-fold and the C V of the positive controls was ⁇ 9 4 % assay
  • a series of 48 hit extracts, chosen from the total primary screen data (le >50% inhibition) were placed on plates with 88 other inactive extracts and re-tested in a 5 point dilution series using both the solid-phase and solution core 2 GlcNAc-T assays 94 4 % ( 17/18) of the hits identified in the solution assay were also hits in the solid phase assay Additional hits.
  • a solid phase glycosyltransferase assay was optimized for use with recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T The assay was also tested with glycopolymer acceptors for GlcNAc-TV and GlcNAc-TI and shown to be acceptable for other glycosyltransferase enzymes
  • the solid-phase core 2 GlcNAc-T assay was used in a HTS of a library of microbial extracts and active extracts were confirmed with a high degree of concordance in the solid-phase and a conventional solution assay
  • the solid-phase assay format allowed 5-6 fold increase in throughput compared to a solution phase assay, for a rate of 7,500 per day
  • L-PHA High Throughput L-PHA Assay Matenals and Methods Chemicals.
  • L-PHA, Triton X- 100 and /? ⁇ ra-n ⁇ trophenyIphosphate were obtained from Sigma, diethanolamine was purchased from Fisher
  • Alkaline phosphatase assay Determinations were carried out using 96-well plates Each well contained a variable number of MDAY-D2 cells maintained in 125 ⁇ l of culture medium supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum The alkaline phosphatase reaction was initiated by adding 75 ⁇ l of assay mixture ( 1 M diethanolamine buffer, pH 9 8. 2 mM MgCl .
  • Normalized Signal (A 405 of sample - mean A 05 positive control)/(mean A 405 negative control - mean A 405 positive control)
  • homogeneous screening assays the results are determined without washing or transferring target proteins or cells, reactants. and test compounds from the assay plates Homogeneous assay formats save time in performing the assay, and with less manipulation, the low errors are observed This translates into fewer follow-up assays on putative hits in a large screen
  • a homogeneous cell- based assay has been developed that measures cell growth and variability using endogenous alkaline phosphatase activity
  • MDAY-D2 tumor cells maintained in tissue culture in log phase of growth exhibit alkaline phosphatase activity in the range 40-80 nmol/h/10 cells
  • Alkaline phosphatase measurements were linear over time for at least 90 min. and directly proportional to cell number, allowing detection of 1500 cells MDAY-D2 doubling time calculated through accumulation of alkaline phosphatase activity was ⁇ 14h. similar to that measured by counting cells.
  • the alkaline phosphatase assay is comparable in reproducibility and sensitivity, with a commercially available, chemiluminometric method.
  • the apparent Km of alkaline phosphatase measured in the MDAY-D2 whole cell assay was 0.86 mM, whereas the value exhibited by the soluble enzyme present in fetal calf serum was 0.21 mM.
  • Background activity present in culture medium containing 2% FCS produced an A 405 of 0.2 after lh of incubation and represented approximately 10% of the signal with the standard assay conditions.
  • Swainsonine blocks ⁇ -mannosidase II, acting as an inhibitor of complex-type N- oligosaccharide biosynthesis resulting in resistance to the toxicity of L-PHA lectin.
  • An IC 50 value of 0.2 ⁇ M was previously reported using thymidine incorporation as a measure of cell growth (Dennis et al. 1993, Biochem. Pharmacol., 46, 1459-1466).
  • the alkaline phosphatase cell assay was applied to high-throughput screening of a microbial extract library.
  • the signal to noise ratio i.e. growth of L-PHA-treated/control MDAY-D2 cells
  • the coefficient of variation of both negative and positive control samples was 4.2% and 2.4%, respectively.
  • Twenty microbial extracts of the 30,000 tested increased cell viability in the presence of L-PHA to a degree greater than 3xSD of the mean. These fell on the right-hand side of normal distribution Figure 12). On re-testing, 4 of the 20 extracts were confirmed as hits for further fractionation. A number of extracts suppressed growth below that observed in the presence of L-PHA (i.e. left of the normal distribution). These likely contain compounds that are generally toxic, and not of interest.
  • the proliferation rate of MDAY-D2 cells was monitored by employing an assay of alkaline phosphatase activity.
  • the motivation for this work was to establish a simple, reproducible and cost- effective procedure to be applied for high throughput screenings via L-PHA assay.
  • a colorimetric determination of alkaline phosphatase activity has been found suitable to measure lymphokine- dependent B cell proliferation (Hashimoto N and Zubler RH ( 1986) J. Immunol. Methods 90, 97-103.); the advantage of the protocol described herein is that the method can be carried out in a single step, without removal of the culture medium or cell pelletting and washing, thereby permitting fully automated procedures.
  • use of a robotic platform allowed simultaneous processing of thirty-six 96-well plates. The method is very cost-effective, especially when compared to other commercially available assay kits.
  • Sensitivity and accuracy of the alkaline phosphatase method are based upon several observations: i) MDAY-D2 cells express relatively high levels of enzyme, whereas background activity present in fetal calf serum (2%) is low; ii) readings of A 405 were found to be proportional to the concentration of reaction product: iii) the reaction is linear with time within a relatively wide interval of up to 1.5h; and, iv) the numbers of MDAY-D2 cells (both untreated and L-PHA-treated) correlated
  • the signal to background ratio may be amplified by increasing the substrate concentration above ImM
  • Escherichia coli cld2 gb m89934 sw p35272 Salmonella typhimurium eld gb zl 7278 sw q04866 (cld ialty) Shigella flexnert eld gb x71970 sw p37792 (cld_sh ⁇ fl) cpsD galactosyltransferase Streptococcus agalactiae cpsD gene gb 109116 lgtA galactosyltransferase
  • Rhtzobium legummosarum Allaway et al (1996) unpublished gb x94963 murG N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase

Abstract

A combinatorial library comprising a predetermined collection of nucleoside peptide molecules for inhibiting the transfer of a sugar from a selected sugar nucleotide donor to a selected acceptor by a carbohydrate processing enzyme. The nucleoside peptide molecule comprises (a) a nucleoside monomer; (b) a spacer monomer coupled to the nucleoside monomer wherein the spacer monomer comprises one or more amide linked amino acid residues, or a peptidomimetic; and (c) cap monomers attached to the spacer monomer. The nucleoside peptide molecules differ from each other as to the identity of at least one element of the nucleoside monomer, spacer monomer, or cap monomer.

Description

TITLE: DIRECTED COMBINATORIAL COMPOUND LIBRARY AND HIGH THROUGHPUT ASSAYS FOR SCREENING SAME FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention is directed to predetermined libraries of compounds, related compounds useful for making such libraries, and compositions containing the compounds BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Interactions between proteins and carbohydrates are involved in a wide array of biological recognition events, including fertilization, molecular targeting, intercellular recognition, and viral, bacterial, and fungal pathogenesis The oligosacchaπde portions of glycoproteins and glyco pids mediate recognition between cells and cells, between cells and ligands, between cells and the extracellular matrix, and between cells and pathogens
Inhibition of carbohydrate processing enzymes involved in the synthesis, transport, and cleavage of oligosaccharides can be used as a means to inhibit interactions between proteins and oligosaccharides and inhibit the recognition phenomena In particular, two groups of enzymes associated with the in vivo synthesis of oligosaccharides can be targeted The enzymes of the Leloir pathway transfer sugars activated as sugar nucleoside phosphates to a growing oligosacchaπde chain The nucleoside phosphate building blocks involved in the Leloir pathway include UDP-Glc, UDP- GlcUA, UDP-GlcNAc, UDP-Gal, UDP-GalNAc, UDP-Idua, GDP-Man, GDP-Fuc. and CMP-NeuAc The other group of enzymes associated with the in vivo synthesis of oligosaccharides are the non-Leloir pathway enzymes that transfer carbohydrate units activated as sugar phosphates, but not as sugar nucleoside phosphates
Glycosyltransferases catalyze the addition of activated sugars from nucleotides in a stepwise fashion to a protein or pid or to the non-reducing end of a growing ohgosacchaπde There are estimated to be over 200 glycosyltransferases encoded by mammalian cells, many of which appear to be developmentally regulated, resulting in tissue specific-patterns of glycosylation (Schachter, H Curr Opin Struct Biol 1 755-765, 1991 , and Paulson, J C and Co Hey, K J J Biol Chem 264 17615- 17618, 1989) Each NDP-sugar residue requires a distinct class of glycosyltransferase and each of the glycosyltransferases appear to catalyze the formation of a unique glycosidic linkage Oligosaccharides may be linked to proteins by N-glycosidic or O-glycosidic linkages In an N-hnkage, an N-acetyl glucosamme residue is β-hnked to the amide nitrogen of an Asn in the sequence Asn-X-Ser or Asn-X- Thr (X is any ammo acid) In an O-linkage, the disacchaπde β-galactosyl-(l,3)-alpha-N- acetylgalactosamine is alpha-linked to the hydroxyl group of serine or threonine
The Golgi enzymes β(Tl-6) /V-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V (I e GlcNAc-TV) and core 2 β(Tl-6) /V-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (I e core 2 GlcNAc-T) are responsible for the extension of GlcNAc β(Tl-6) branched N- and (9-lιnked carbohydrate side chains of cell-surface glycoproteins These side chains are found on the surface of human tumor cells and they have been associated with cancer invasion and metastasis (Dennis et al , Science 236 582, 1987, Demetriou et al , J Cell Biol /50 383, 1995) GlcNAc-TV and core 2 GlcNAc-T have been shown to be up-regulated in human carcinomas (Femandes et al , Cancer Res 51 718-723, 1991, Shimodaira, K et al. Cancer Research 57 5201 1997), a phenomenon that has been associated with the activation of the ras signaling pathway (Dennis et al . Science 236 582-585 1987, Dennis et al Oncogene 4 853-860, 1989)) Overexpression of GlcNAc-TV in epithelial cells has been found to result in morphological transformation and tumor formation in mice (Demetπou et al J Cell Biol 130 383-392, 1995) Therefore GlcNAc-TV as well as enzymes supplying acceptor substrates to GlcNAc-TV (l e GlcNAc-TI. α-mannosidase II and core 2 GlcNAc-T of the O-hnked pathway) are useful targets for anti-cancer pharmaceuticals
Fucosyltransferases are involved in determining the expression of sialyl Lewis'1 (sLex )
X antigen on the surface of blood cells In the inflammatory process, selectm-sLex mediated attachment of leukocytes is a key step for leukocyte activation and trans-endothelial migration Inhibition of fuscosyltransferases responsible for the synthesis of sLex will prevent the formation of selectm- carbohyαrate complexes and therefore will interfere with the first step of the inflammatory process Inhibitors would be useful for the treatment of chronic inflammatory disorders such as asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and atherosclerosis All of these disorders are conditions w here an inappropriate inflammatory response is involved and suppression is desirable
Blocking of certain enzymes in the carbohydrate processing pathway leads to an increased sensιtιvιt of immune cells to Th l cytokines (interferon ana ιnterleukιn-2), thereby further promoting the Thl immune response While interferon-alpha itself has anti-viral activity, it appears to be insufficient on its own in eliminating chronic infections such as hepatitis Therefore, enzyme inhibitors can be used to enhance the effect ot Th 1 cytokines in the treatment of many \ iral, bacterial, fungal and parasitic infections including hepatitis B and C
Inhibitors of enzymes that synthesize specific carbohydrate structures of bacteria that play an important role in pathogenicitv can be used to enhance the susceptibility of the bacteria to the host immune s>stem and to inhibit the entry of the bacteria into human cells and tissues For example, a specific bacterial carbohydrate structure called low molecular weight oligosacchaπde (LOS) that is similar to a carbohydrate structure found on human glycoproteins and glycolipids, protects the bacterium from being recognized and cleared by the host's immune system Inhibitors of the enzymes responsible for synthesizing the LOS structure can reduce the ability of bacteria such as N gonorrhea to elude immune surveillance in a host It is apparent that there is a need for small molecule inhibitors of carbohydrate processing enzymes including GlcNAc-transferases I through V, galactosyltransferases, sialo transferases, fucosyl transferases and core 2 GlcNAc with structural and conformational diversity There is also a need for high throughput methods for screening the inhibitors to identify "lead" pharmaceutical compounds SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention utilizes a combinatorial chemistry approach Combinatorial chemistry generally involves linking together in step-wise fashion, identical or non-identical building blocks typically referred to as monomeπc units" or "chemical groups" Using this approach the present inventors developed combinatorial libraries of small molecule inhibitors of carbohydrate processing enzymes that transfer a sugar from a specific sugar nucleotide donor to a specific acceptor The small molecule inhibitors have structural and conformational diversity Enzymes that may be inhibited by the small molecule inhibitors include eukaryotic and procaryotic glycosyltransferases The molecules can be screened using high throughput methods enabling identification of lead pharmaceutical compounds Broadly stated the present invention relates to a combinatorial library comprising a predetermined collection of nucleoside peptide molecules for inhibiting the transfer of a sugar from a selected sugar nucleotide donor to a selected acceptor by a carbohydrate processing enzyme wherein a nucleoside peptide molecule comprises (a) a nucleoside monomer, (b) a spacer monomer coupled to the nucleoside monomer wherein the spacer monomer comprises one or more amino acids, or a peptidomimetic or peptide analog, and (c) cap monomers attached to the spacer monomer, wherein the nucleoside peptide molecules differ from each other as to the identity of at least one element of the nucleoside monomer, spacer monomer or cap monomer
In addition, a nucleoside peptide molecule is contemplated comprising (a) a nucleoside monomer, (b) a spacer monomer coupled to a nucleoside monomer, wherein the spacer monomer comprises one or more amino acids, or a peptidomimetic or peptide analog, and (c) cap monomers attached to the spacer monomer
The invention also relates to a process for preparing a combinatorial library containing a predetermined collection of nucleoside peptide molecules for inhibiting the transfer of a sugar from a selected sugar nucleotide donor having a heterocychc amine base, to a selected acceptor by a carbohydrate processing enzyme comprising
(a) coupling one or more amino acids or a peptidomimetic or peptide analog to a nucleoside monomer unit which nucleoside monomer unit comprises a heterocychc amine base coupled to a sugar wherein the base corresponds to the heterocychc amine base of the sugar nucleotide donor, or a modified form or analogue of the base, and (b) capping any free functional groups or amine groups with a cap monomer unit
The invention also relates to methods of using the combinatorial library for screening for pharmacologically active molecules, and pharmaceutical compositions containing compounds identified by the methods
Further, the invention contemplates a solid-phase bioassay for identifying a compound having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme which comprises (a) coupling an acceptor for the carbohydrate processing enzyme to a polymer and coating onto a carrier, (b) adding a carbohydrate processing enzyme, a sugar nucleotide donor labeled with a detectable substance, and a test compound, and (c) measuring the detectable change produced by the detectable substance
The invention also contemplates a method for identifying a compound that inhibits N-hnked oligosacchaπde processing comprising (a) reacting a test compound with cells expressing N-hnked oligosaccharides, in the presence of leukoagglutinating phytohemagglutmin (L-PHA) and measunng alkaline phosphatase activity, and (b) comparing to a control in the absence of the compound wherein an increase in alkaline phosphatase activity indicates that the compound inhibits N-hnked oligosacchaπde processing The method may be used to identify compounds that inhibit all steps in the N-linked oligosaccharide pathway prior to βl-4 Gal-transferase, including compounds that inhibit the carbohydrate processing enzymes specifically described herein, and Golgi α-mannosidase.
A compound contemplated by the present invention having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme can be useful for the treatment and prophylaxis of tumor growth and metastasis of tumors; the prevention of tumor recurrence after surgery; the treatment of other anti- proliferative conditions such as viral infections; the stimulation of bone marrow cell proliferation, the treatment of immunocompromised patients, such as patients infected with HIV, or other viruses or infectious agents including bacteria and fungi; the prevention and treatment of diseases caused by bacterial pathogens having carbohydrate structures on their surface associated with virulence such as Neisseria. Haemophilus. E. coli, Bacillus, Salmonella, Campvlobacter, Klebsiella. Pseudomonas,
Streptococcus, Chlamydia, Borrelia, Coxiella, Helicobacter, and Mycobacterim species; or, the treatment of inflammatory disorders such as asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, and atherosclerosis. A compound of the invention may also be used in patients undergoing bone marrow transplants, and as hemorestorative or chemoprotective agents in patients with chemical or tumor-induced immune suppression.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description. It should be understood, however, that the detailed description and the specific examples while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention are given by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from this detailed description. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in relation to the drawings in which:
Figure 1 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 2.3-O-isopropylidineuridine from uridine; Figure 2 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 2,3-0-isopropylidene-5-0- methane sulfonyl uridine from 2,3-O-isopropylidine uridine;
Figure 3 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 5-deoxy-5-azido-2,3-0- isopropylidenyl uridine from 2,3-0-isopropylidene-5-0-methanesulfonyl uridine;
Figure 4 is a schematic diagram showing a process for preparing 5-deoxy-5-amino-2,3-0- isopropylidenyl uridine from the parent azide;
Figure 5 is a schematic diagram showing a process for coupling an N-Boc protected spacer monomer unit to a nucleoside monomer unit;
Figure 6 is a schematic diagram for a process for deprotecting an N-Boc protected spacer monomer unit coupled to a nucleoside monomer unit; Figure 7 is a schematic diagram showing a process for repeated coupling of Fmoc -protected spacer monomer units to a nucleoside monomer unit;
Figure 8 is a schematic diagram for capping a spacer monomer unit that is coupled to a nucleoside monomer unit; Figure 9 is a schematic diagram showing the synthesis of a glycopolymer for a solid-phase core 2 GlcNAc-T assay;
Figure 10 is a schematic diagram showing a glycopolymer for a solid-phase GlcNAc-T V assay; Figure 1 1 is a graph showing the distribution of normalized core 2 GlcNAc-T assay results for
1600 assays expressed as % control; and
Figure 12 is a graph showing the results of a high-throughput screen to detect microbial extracts with inhibitory effects on N-linked oligosaccharide processing in MDAY-D2 cells. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION Nucleoside Peptide Molecules
As used herein "monomer unit" refers to a molecule prior to coupling or conjugation to another monomer unit. A "monomer" refers to a molecule after coupling or conjugating to form a nucleoside peptide molecule. Monomer units used in the present invention to form the predetermined nucleoside peptide molecules include a nucleoside monomer unit, a spacer monomer unit, and a cap monomer unit.
A nucleoside monomer unit is selected based on the type of carbohydrate processing enzyme targeted for inhibition, and in particular the sugar nucleotide donor for the enzyme from which a sugar is transferred to an acceptor. A "sugar nucleotide donor" refers to a molecule comprising a nucleotide having a sugar component, a heterocyclic amine base, and a phosphate unit, coupled to a selected sugar that is transferred by a carbohydrate processing enzyme to an acceptor. An "acceptor" refers to the part of a carbohydrate structure (e.g. glycoprotein, glycolipid) where the selected sugar is transferred by a carbohydrate processing enzyme.
Carbohydrate processing enzymes for which combinatorial libraries may be prepared in accordance with the invention include eukaryotic glycosyltransferases involved in the biosynthesis of glycoproteins, glycolipids, glycosylphosphatidylinositols and other complex glycoconjugates, and prokaryotic glycosyltransferases involved in the synthesis of carbohydrate structures of bacteria and viruses, including enzymes involved in LOS and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis. Examples of enzymes include glycosyltransferases such as N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases, including N- acetylglucosaminyltransferases I through V and β-l,3-galactosyl-0-glycosyl-glycoprotein β 1,6-N- acetylgucosaminyl transferase (core 2 GlcNAc); fucosyltransferase; N-acetyl galactosaminyltransferases; galactosyltransferases; mannosyltransferases; and glucuronosyltransferases, preferably N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases. Table 1 provides examples of eukaryotic carbohydrate processing enzymes, and their sugar nucleotide donors and acceptors. Table 2 provides a list of prokaryotic carbohydrate processing enzymes. A nucleoside monomer unit used in the molecules of the present invention is composed of a heterocyclic amine base in β-N-glycosidic linkage with a sugar. Generally, the sugar is ribose, or deoxyribose, and the heterocyclic amine base corresponds to the heterocyclic amine base of the sugar nucleotide donor for a selected carbohydrate processing enzyme. For example, uracil can be selected for N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases and galactosyltransferases. cytosine for asialo transferases, and guanme for fucosyltransferases
Structural analogues of the heterocyc c amine bases mav also be used For example, when the base is uracil it may have groups at the C-5 position including but not limited to alkyl or aryl with electron donating and electron withdrawing groups Hydroxyl groups in the base may also be protected.
The sugar may be modified for example, the 2' and 3' hydroxvls may be blocked with acetonide, acylated. or alkylated or substituted with other groups such as halogen
Specific examples of nucleoside monomer units include undine, 2'-deoxyuπdιne, and 5'- amιno-5'-deoxy-2',3'-( -ιsopropylιdιne undine (for galactosyltransferases and GlcNAc transferases, cytidine, 2'-deoxycytιdme, 5'-amιno-5'-deoxy-2',3'-0-ιsopropylιdιnecytιdιne (for sialo transferases), and guanosine, 2'-deoxyguanosιne. 5 '-amιno-5'-deoxy-2\3'-<9-ιsopropylιdιneguanosιne (for fucosyl transferases), respectively
A nucleoside monomer unit is linked to a spacer monomer unit by coupling appropriate reactive groups such as carboxylic acids, or activated esters thereof (e g hydroxybenzotriazole, pentafiuorophenol or N-hydroxysuccinimide esters), carboxylic anhydrides (mixed or symmetric), acyl halides, chloro formates, halides, ketones, aldehydes, sulfony l chlorides, isocyanates, or isothiocyanates, to other reactive functional groups such as amines to form a stable linkage such as an amide, carbamate, ammo, sulfonamide. urea, or isourea, preferably an amide linkage Each of the monomer units may have one or more identical or different reactive groups A spacer monomer unit for use in the invention may comprise any functional group that mimics the phosphate/ sugar linkage in a sugar nucleotide donor for a carbohydrate processing enzyme, or which interacts with the enzyme by other mechanisms The spacer monomer unit may have a charged center Examples of spacer monomer units that can be used in the molecules of the invention include one or more amino acids, preferably a single amino acid, a dipeptide, or tπpeptide, or peptidomimetics/ peptide analog
Ammo acids used in the spacer monomer unit may be naturally-occurring or synthetic amino acids, and they can be aliphatic, or aromatic. An amino acid in the spacer monomer unit may be a chiral or achiral ammo acid including but not limited to an L-ammo acid, a D-amino acid, an α-ammo acid, a β-amino acid, or an analog of an amino acid. In addition, one or more amino acids in the spacer monomer unit may be substituted with a substituent group such as an amide, alkyl, amine. halogen, ether, heterocycle, or an acidic group such as -COOH, or SO3H The amino acids may be capped with suitable protecting groups as described herein The amino acid or peptides may comprise acidic amino acid residues including aspartic acid or glutamic acid, and aspartic acid and glutamic acid mono-benzyl esters or t-butyl esters (for example, at the α- and β- positions for the former, and a- and γ- for the latter).
Examples of amino acids that may be used in the spacer monomer unit include L-aspartic acid-α-benzyl ester, L-glutamic acid-γ-benzyl ester. D-aspartic aαd-β-benzyl ester, L-aspartic acid-β- benzyl ester, L-glutamic acid-α-benzyl ester, L-tryptophan. 6-amιnohexanoιc acid. L-vahne. m-tosyl- L-histidme. L-leucine, p-metho\v-benzyl-L-cysteιne, sarcosme, L-isoleucine, L-asparagme. ω-p-tosyl L-arginine. ω-nitro-L-arginine, N-ε-CBz-L-lysine, L-glutamine. L-alanine, O-benzyl-L-threonine, O- benzyl-L-tyrosine, L-methionine, O-benzyl-L-serine, L-proline, L-phenylalanine. β-alanine, α- aminoisobutyric acid, homoarginine, homoproline, homoserine, norarginine, norleucine. ornthine, and p-nitrophenylalanine. Peptidomimetics or peptide analogs may also be used in the spacer monomer unit. Generally, peptidomimetics are structurally similar to a paradigm, such as naturally-occuring peptides, but have one or more peptide linkages optionally replaced for example, by a linkage selected from the group consisting of: -CI-bNH-, -CPbS-, CHbCI-b- , -CH=CH- (cis and trans), -COCH2 -, -CH(OH) CH2-, and -CH2SO- by methods known in the art and further described in the following references: Spatola. A. F. in CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY OF AMINO ACIDS. PEPTIDES, AND PROTEINS, B. Weinstein, eds., Marcel Dekker, New York, p.267 (1983); Spatola, A. F., Vega Data (March 1983), Vol. 1, Issue 3, PEPTIDE BACKBONE MODIFICATIONS (general review); Morley. Trends Pharm Sci (1980) pp. 463-468 (general review); Gaute ( 1994) Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. EngL 33: 1699-1720; Giannis and Kolter ( 1993). Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl.. 32: 1244- 1267; Hudson. D. et al., (1979) Int J Pept Prot Res 14: 177-185 (--CH2NH--. CH2CH2--); Spatola et al., (1986) Life Sci 38:1243-1249 (-- CH2--S); Hann ( 1982) J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. I 307-314 (-CH=CH-, cis and trans); Almquist et al, (1980) J Med Chem 23: 1392- 1398 (-COCH2-); Jennings- White et al.. ( 1982) Tetrahedron Lett 23:2533 (-COCH2-); Szelke et al., ( 1982) European Appln. EP 45665 CA: 97:39405 ( 1982) (-CH(OH) CH2-); Holladay et al., ( 1983) Tetrahedron Lett 24:4401-4404 (-C(OH)CH2-); and Hruby ( 1982) Life Sci 31 : 189- 199 (-CH2-S-); each of which is incorporated herein by reference. Peptidomimetics or peptide analogs also include peptides wherein the N-terminus is derivatized for example to a -NXX, group, to a -NXC(0)X group, to a ~NXC(0)OX group, to a »NXS(0)2X group, to a ~NHC(0)NHX group where X and X, are hydrogen or lower alkyl with the proviso that X and X, are not both hydrogen, to a succinimide group, to a benzyloxycarbonyl-NH-(CBZ-NH-) group, to a benzyloxycarbonyl-NH~group having from 1 to 3 substituents on the phenyl ring selected from the group consisting of lower alkyl, lower alkoxy, chloro, and bromo, peptides wherein the C terminus is derivatized to — C(0)X2 where X2 is selected from the group consisting of lower alkoxy, and — NX3X4 where X3 and X4 are independently selected from the group consisting of hydrogen and lower alkyl.
Free functional groups on a nucleoside peptide molecule, in particular free amine groups in the spacer monomer, may be capped using the same or different chemical reactive groups used for a spacer monomer unit coupling to nucleoside monomer units. Examples of cap monomer units include ureas, thioureas, carbamates. and amide residues, which may be part of aromatic rings, non-aromatic rings, heterocyclics, carbocyclics, or fused ring systems. Reactive derivatives of naturally occurring alkaloids such as swainsonine or castanospermine may also be used as cap monomers. Examples of commercially available reagents that may be used to form the cap monomer units include: benzoyl chloride, benzenesulfonyl isocyanate, 4-toluenesulfonyl isocyanate, 2-furonyl chloride, (R)-α- methylbenzyl isocyanate, 4-(trifluoromethylthio)phenyl isocyanate, 2-methoxycarbonyl, phenyl isocyanate, 4-morpholine carbonyl chloride, l -isothiocyanato-4-(trans-4-octylcyclohexyl) benezene, 3- (trifluoromethyl)phenyi isocyanate, 1 -adamantanecarbonyl chloride, 4-chlorobenezene sulfonyl isocyanate, quinoxay chloride, 2-thiophenecarbonyl chloride, 2-naphthyl isocyanate, 2-thiopheneacetyl chloride, 1-adamantyl isocyanate, 3-cyclopentylpropionyl chloride, pyrolidine carbonyl chloride, 4- trifluoromethoxy-benzoyl chloride, 3-methoxy benzoyl chloride, 4-[4-isothiocyanato phenyl azo] N,N- dimethyl aniline, chloro acetic anhydride, 4-fluoro benzoyl isocyanate, picolinic acid, nicotinic acid, isonicotinic acid, 6-methylnicotinic acid, 3-pydidylacetic acid, trans-3-(3-pyridyl)acrylic acid, (4- pyridylthio)acetic acid, 2-chloronicotinic acid, 6-chloronicotinic acid, 5,6-dichloronicotine acid, 6- hydroxypicolinic acid, 6-hydroxynicotinic acid, 3-hydroxypicolinic acid, 5-chloro-6-hydroxynicotinic acid, 4-pyridoxic, citrazinic acid, 2-furoic acid, 3-furoic acid, 5-bromo-2-furoic acid, 2- thiophenecarboxylic acid, 3-thiophenecarboxylic acid, 4-nitro-3-pyrazolecarboxylic acid, 5-nitro-3- pyrazolecarboxylic acid, 4-hydroxy-7-fluoromethyl-3-quinolinecarboxylic acid, and 4,8- dihydroxyquinoline-2-carboxylic acid. Examples of cap monomers that can be used to cap a free NH and form part of the nucleoside peptide molecules include but are not limited to methyl (Me), formyl (CHO), ethyl (Et), acetyl (Ac), t-butyl (t-bu), anisyl, trifluoroaceryl (Tfa), benzoyl (Bz), 4- methylbenzyl (Meb), thioanizyl, thiocresyl, benzyloxymethyl, 4-nitrophenyl (Pnp), benzyloxycarbonyl (Z), 2-nitrobenzoyl (NBz), 2-nitrophenylsulphenyl (Nps), 4-toluenesulphonyl (Tosyl, Tos), pentafluorophenyl (Pfp), diphenylmethyl (Dpm), 2-chlorobenzyloxycarbonyl (Cl-Z), 2,4,5- trichlorophenyl, 2-bromobenzyioxycarbonyl (Br-Z), triphenylmethyl (Trityl, Trt), 2,2,5,7,8- pentamethyl-chroman-6-sulphonyl (Pmc), t-butyloxycarbonyl (Boc), benzyl (Bzl), benzyloxymethyl (Bom), and 9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl(Fmoc).
Sugar transition state analogues (e.g. GlcNAc analogues) may be coupled to the nucleoside peptide molecules in a position in space close to where a sugar-phosphate bond would be cleaved in a corresponding sugar nucleotide donor.
Specific examples of nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention have the formula I:
Figure imgf000010_0001
wherein X is H, -COOH, -OS03H, (CH2)qS03H where q is 0 or 1, or -OP03H, and R represents (Y)m where Y is a substituted amide group (e.g. an amide linked amino acid residue) and m is 1-3, Z' and Z are the same or different and represent hydroxyl or alkoxy, or Z' and Z together form an acetonide group, and wherein free NH2 groups in the compound of the formula I are preferably capped with the cap monomers mentioned herein, preferably with Fmoc or Boc. Specific examples of nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention have the formula I wherein X is H, -COOH, -OS03H, or (CH2)qS03H where q is 0 or 1, Z and Z' are both hydroxyl or together form an acetonide group, R represents -NHCOR1, wherein R1 represents
(a) wherein R2 is alkoxy; or
Figure imgf000011_0001
(b) -CHR3R4 wherein R3 is hydrogen or -NH2, and R4 is -R5 wherein R5 is
halogen, alkyl, or alkoxy *, -CH2N(CH3)CH2CH2R6 or - N(CH3)CH2CH2R6
Figure imgf000011_0002
wherein R is halogen,
, -CH2N(C2H5)CH2CH(CH3)OH, or -CH2NHCOCH(CH3)2, or
Figure imgf000011_0003
represents (CH2)„R8 wherein n = 0 to 5, R8 is halogen, R9 is
Figure imgf000011_0004
Figure imgf000011_0005
-N(CH3)CH2CH2R10 wherein R10 is halogen, -N(C2H5)CH2CH(CH3)OH, or -NHCOCH(CH3)2 and wherein free amino groups are protected with a cap monomer.
In an embodiment of a compound of the formula I of the invention, X is -COOH, and R represents -NHCOR1 wherein R1 represents -CHR3R4 wherein R3 is hydrogen, and R4 is (CH2)nR8
wherein n = 0 to 5, preferably 1 to 4, R8 is halogen, R9 is alkoxy, halogen, or alkyl,
Figure imgf000011_0006
Figure imgf000011_0007
or -N(CH3)CH2CH2R10 wherein R10 is halogen, -N(C2H5)CH2CH(CH3)OH, or -NHCOCH(CH3)2.
In another embodiment of the invention, a compound of the formula I is provided wherein , X is -COOH, and R represents -NHCOR1 wherein R1 represents -CHR3R4 wherein R3 represents -NH2, and R4
is wherein R5 is halogen, alkyl or alkoxy,
Figure imgf000011_0008
Figure imgf000011_0009
-CH2N(CH3)CH2CH2R6 wherein R6 is halogen, -CH2N(C2H5)CH2CH(CH3)OH,
CH2NHCOCH(CH3)2
Figure imgf000012_0001
In a further embodiment of the invention, a compound of the formula I is provided wherein X is -OS03H, or (CH2)qS03H where q is 0 or 1, R represents -NHCOR1 wherein R1 represents -CHR3R4 wherein R3 represents -NH and R4 is
R- w„=rei„ R. , _**_. alkyl, or α™,, -CH!N(C!H5,CH!CH(C„J,0„, o,
-CH2NHCOCH(CH3)2. In a particular embodiment, a nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I is provided wherein X
is -COOH, R is represents -NHCOR1 wherein R1 represents -C (CH3)(NH2)CH2 R**
Figure imgf000012_0002
wherein R2 is alkoxy. As used herein the term "alkyl", alone or in combination, refers to a branched or linear hydrocarbon radical, typically containing from 1 through 10 carbon atoms, preferably 1 through 5. Typical alkyl groups include but are not limited to methyl, ethyl, 1 -propyl, 2-propyl, 1 -butyl, 2-butyl, tert-butyl, or pentyl, preferably methyl or ethyl.
The term "alkoxy" refers to an alkyl linked to the parent molecular moiety through an oxygen atom. Examples of alkoxy groups include O-methyl i.e. methoxy, O-allyl i.e. allyloxy, O-propyl i.e. propoxy, O-butyl i.e. butoxy, and the like, preferably methoxy or allyloxy.
The term "halo" or "halogen", alone or in combination, refers to a member of the family fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine.
Specific examples of nucleoside peptide molecules are shown in Tables 3, 4, and 5. In the nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention the stereochemistry of chiral carbon atoms in the nucleoside monomer unit, spacer monomer unit, or cap monomer unit can independently be in the R or S configuration, or a mixture of the two. For example, amino acids of the spacer monomer can be in the L-or D-configuration, resulting in the same amino acid, varying only in its stereochemistry. Therefore, the present invention encompasses a nucleoside peptide molecule of the invention as a mixture of diastereomers, as well as in the form of an individual diastereomer, and the present invention encompasses a nucleoside peptide molecule as a mixture of enantiomers, as well as in the form of an individual enantiomer. All optical isomers and racemic forms thereof of the nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention are contemplated herein, and the nucleoside peptide molecules shown herein are intended to encompass all possible optical isomers of the compounds so depicted. The formation of diastereomers may be carried out pre or post spacer attachment to the nucleoside monomer unit by using L and/or D ammo acids during synthesis or by racemizing chiral centers after spacer attachment or construction with base
Nucleoside peptide molecules of the invention may be present as pharmaceutically acceptable salts The term "pharmaceutically acceptable salts" encompasses those salts that form by standard acid- base reactions with basic groups and organic or inorganic acids, or acidic groups and bases Examples of acids include hydrochloric, sulfuπc, phosphoric, acetic, succimc, citric, lactic, maleic. fumaπc, palmitic, cholic, pamoic, mucic, D-glutamic, d-camphoπc, glutaπc, phtha c, tartaπc, launc, steanc, salicychc, methanesulfonic, benezenesulfonic,sorbic, benzoic. cinnamic, and like acids Examples of bases include LiOH, NaOH, KOK and Ca(CH2) Basic amino acids (e g glycme, ornithine, histidine, phenylglycine, lysine, and arginine) in a spacer monomer unit may be in protonated forms Preparation of a Combinatorial Library
A monomer unit is chemically conjugated l e covalently linked or coupled, to an adjoining monomer unit or building block to prepare a combinatorial library of the invention After conjugation, a monomer unit is altered, for example, upon reaction to form a covalent bond, the monomer can lose a water molecule, or can undergo formation of a urea or carbamate group There are innumerable variations in the nature of the monomer units and in the t pes of chemical reactions that can be used to chemically conjugate the monomers In addition, solid phase and solution phase chemistries may be used to synthesize a combinatorial library of the invention The building blocks or monomers used in the compounds contained in the library of the invention may be assembled "backwards" ι e the last building block added to the 'growing chain" may be analogous to the 5 terminal end of a peptide or polypeptide For example, in a library schematically depicted as undine-spacer-cap, the undine building block or monomeπc unit may be chemically conjugated to an adioining spacer unit last in time In this scheme, the cap monomeπc unit is generally attached to a solid phase matrix until release of undine-spacer-cap following the last chemical conjugation reaction
Examples of processes for preparing compounds in combinatorial libraries of the invention are set out below
A combinatorial library of the invention where the reactive group on the nucleoside monomer unit is an amme may be prepared using an acetonide, or other suitable protecting groups to temporarily protect chemically active sites In particular, a library based on undine structures may be produced using a 5'-deoxy-5'-amιno-2',3'-0-ιsopropylιdιnylundιne template The template may be prepared by acetonide blockage of the 2'- and 3 '-hydroxyl groups, activation of the 5'hydroxy using mesylation, tosylation, or tπflation, subsequent reaction with sodium azide, and reduction (for example, see Figures 1 to 4) A spacer monomer unit comprising an amino acid, dipeptide, or tπpeptide which is suitably protected, e g N-t-butyloxycarbonyl (Boc), or N-9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl(Fmoc)-protected, may be coupled with the undine template in free base form ((for example, see Figure 5) This is followed by deprotection (see for example. Figure 6) Purification of the nucleoside peptide monomer unit and spacer unit is carried out using conventional methods, and the free amme bases may be capped with for example, carboxylic acids, anhydrides esters, isocyanates lsothiocyanate, acid chloride, or aldehydes (see for example, Figure 7)
The invention also contemplates intermediates used in the processes of the invention, including nucleoside peptide molecules of the combinatorial libraries of the invention having a protected hvdroxy in the heterocyclic am e base and/or which may be blocked at the 2' or 3' hydroxyls
The spacer monomer unit may be coupled to the nucleoside monomer unit using a synthetic strategy that consists of three chemical steps and two purification steps, all of which can be automated Examples of reaction schemes for adding the spacer monomer unit are shown in Figures 5 and 6 The reactions may be performed in deep well ( 1 or 2 mL), 96-well-formatmιcrotιtre plates The first step is to couple Boc- protected amino acids, dipeptides or tnpeptides to the undine template in free base form This is followed by concomitant N-deprotection and acetonide deblockage using an excess of TFA The TFA salts are neutralized by ion exchange slurrying using a Polyfiltronics™ unifilter plate (in 96 well format), allowing for the generation of free amine residues The free amine groups are capped for example with isocyanates, isothiocyanates carboxylic acids, suifonyl chlorides, and acyl chlorides to give five libraries of products Purification, if necessary, can be carried out by slurrying with aminomethyl resin, which scavenges any excess capping reagent, or with alumina silica or Floπsil™ which retains excess reagents and byproducts The slurrying can be performed in a Polyfiltronics™ plate The free terminal amine groups may also be capped with aldehydes under reductive animation conditions For benzyl ester- protected derivatives (e g aspartic acid and glutamic acid residues in the spacer monomer unit), manual transfer hvdrogenation using ammonium formate, Pd-C (10%, wet) and methanol, hydrolysis (TFA, H20) or saponιficatιon(methanol, KOH, H^O) can be performed to liberate the carboxylate and racemize chiral amino acid fragments if desired
An alternative reaction scheme for adding spacer monomer units using an Fmoc strategy is shown in Figure 7 The reactions may be performed in deep well (1 or 2mL), 96-well format microtitre plates if desired The first step is to couple Fmoc-protected amino acids, dipeptides or tnpeptides to the free amme group of the undine monomer template This is followed by Fmoc deprotection with morpho ne in DMF as solvent This method liberates the free terminal amme without removing the isopropylidene protecting group No neutralization step is necessary and morphohne is easily removed by evaporation under reduced pressure The terminal ammes are then capped as required, as described above The acetonide protecting group can be removed from all or selected capped or uncapped undine peptides a final reaction sequence by treatment with TFA at room temperature followed by evaporation of reagents and solvent under reduced pressure (see Figure 8)
A combinatorial library of the invention where an amide group links a nucleoside monomer unit and a spacer monomer unit may be prepared by forming a compound of the formula I where R represents -NHCOCHRJR4 wherein RJ is NH2 using the method as described in N P Damodaran et al J Am Chem Soc 93, 3812, 1971 The free amino form of the compound is subjected to condensation with a corresponding ester of RJ in aqueous DMF in the presence of N-methyl morpholine at an appropriate temperature Other reactive esters such as N-hydroxy succinimidyl, hvdroxybenzotriazole, or pentafluorophenyl esters, or other reactive esters commonly used in peptide synthesis may also be used For example, synthesis of a compound of the formula I where R4 is (CH2)πR8 where n is 2 and R8 is halogen (compound A in Table 3) can be achieved by using the methyl ester of 1 -fluorobutyric acid Similarly, compounds B, C, and D in Table 3 can be synthesized by using an ester of the corresponding acid, which can be synthesized by conventional methods Compounds E to J in Table 3 can be synthesized by using the appropriate esters of the corresponding acids, which are commercially available For compounds F to H in Table 3, prior to condensation, the free amino group in the esterified reagent is blocked with a suitable group
A combinatorial library containing the selected compounds shown in Tables 4 and 5 where X is sulphate can be synthesized by a similar condensation of an ester with a free amme
Predetermined compounds in the combinatorial library where C-5 of a undine has different alkyl and aryl groups may be prepared by mercuration of commercially available UDP with mercuric acetate to give UDP-C-5-mercuπc acetate, which on treatment with an appropriate alkene compound in the presence of potassium tetrachloropalladate produces the corresponding C-5-alkene derivative On selective reduction, these compounds give C-5-alkyl compounds This type of denvatization is known as the Heck reaction and it can be carried out in a variety of ways known in the art (Ryabov, Synthesis (1985) 233-252, and Heck, Org React ( 1982) 27 345-390)
A transition state analogue of a sugar which is transferred by a sugar nucleotide donor may be coupled to a nucleoside peptide molecule of the invention For example, a GlcNAc cation analogue can be generated, and prepared in a form that would allow it to be coupled to a undine ribose molecule of the invention Bioassays
The combinatorial library of the invention contains putative inhibitors of carbohydrate processing enzymes Inhibitors with appropriate selectivity and activity against a particular carbohydrate processing enzyme may be selected using conventional bioassays and the bioassays described herein Bioassays may be adapted for high throughput screening incorporating automation and robotics to enable testing thousands to millions of compounds in a relatively short time Preliminary screening of 5408 compounds from a library of the invention, revealed that 2-3% of the compounds had inhibitory activity in conventional core 2 GlcNAc-T, GlcNAc-TV, and GlcNAc-TI assays
Once "lead" compounds are identified using the screening techniques, combinatorial chemistry methods can be used to optimize the initial leads The optimized analogs/variants can be tested in the same screening assays that identified the initial lead
The methods designed by the present inventors described herein use simple, and rapid functional assays that can identify one or more active ingredients in tested pools without the need for a long deconvolution process The assays are used in robotics systems that can handle large numbers of samples for proportioning, mixing, and sample-handling The invention therefore makes available robotics that can perform multiple chemical reactions at variable temperatures, and subsequently handle work up and characterization of bioactive leads The selection means enable identification of active compounds within the combinatorial libraries that can generate affinity enrichment or affinity selection, and this enrichment and selection may be followed by mass spectroscopic identification of any bioactive compounds
The present invention contemplates a solid-phase bioassay for identifying a compound in a combinatorial library of the invention having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme including glycosyltransferases or glycosidases The method is particularly useful for drug screening The solid-phase bioassay involves coupling a carbohydrate acceptor for the carbohydrate processing enzyme to a polymer and coating onto a carrier or support A carbohydrate processing enzyme, a sugar nucleotide donor labeled with a detectable substance, and a test compound are added, and the detectable change produced by the detectable substance is measured
Examples of polymers to which an acceptor may be coupled include polyacrylamide The carrier or support may be for example nitrocellulose, or glass, gabbros, or magnetite The support material may have any possible configuration including spherical (e g bead) cylindrical (e g inside surface of a test tube or well, or the external surface of a rod), or flat (e g sheet, test strip) Examples of detectable substances include, but are not limited to, radioisotopes (e g , ' H, 14C, j5S, l25I, |j |I), fluorescent labels (e g , FITC, rhodamine, lanthanide phosphors), luminescent labels such as luminol. enzymatic labels (e g , horseradish peroxidase, beta -galactosidase. luciferase. alkaline phosphatase acetylcho nesterase), and biot yl groups (which can be detected bv marked avidm e g , streptavidin containing a fluorescent marker or enzymatic activity that can be detected by optical or caloπmetπc methods) In an embodiment of the invention the detectable substance is a radioactive material, most preferably tritium
A carbohydrate processing enzyme used in the method may be obtained using conventional extraction methods from natural sources, it may be a recombinant enzyme, or it may be obtained from commercial sources In an embodiment of the invention, the assay involves coupling carbohydrate acceptors to a polymer (e g polyacrylamide) and coating onto a carrier, such as the surface of 96 well plastic plates The glycosyltransferase reaction is performed with recombinant enzymes and a tπtiated sugar- nucleotide donor, followed by washing, addition of scintillation counting fluid, and measurement of radioactivity with a β-counter Glycopolymer construction and coating of the plastic plates, enzyme and substrate concentrations, and linearity with time were optimized using UDP-GlcNAc Galβl-3GalNAc- R βl-6-N-acetylglucosamιnyltransferase (GlcNAc to GalNAc) (l e core 2 GlcNAc-T), a rate-limiting reaction for expression of polylactosamine and the selectin ligand sialy Lewis Polylactosamme expression has been associated with malignant transformation (Itzkowitz, SH et al , Cancer Res , 46, 2627-2632. 1986, Kim YS et al . Cancer Res 46, 5985-5992 1986,), development (Pennington JE et al , JEmbnol , 90, 335-361 , 1985) and proliferative activation of lymphocytes (Higgins EA et al , J Biol Chem , 266, 6280-6290, 1991 ) Polylactosamme structures have been shown to play a significant role in cell-ceil and cell-substratum adhesion processes (Zhu BC and Lame RA. J Biol Chem , 260, 4041-4045 1985. Laferte' S and Dennis JW. Cancer Res . 48, 4743-4748, 1988) Additionally, they may act as ligands for mammalian lectins (Merkle RK and Cummings RD. J Biol Chem , 263, 16143- 16149, 1988)
In a screen to detect core 2 GlcNAc-T inhibitors in a microbial extract library, the CV for positive controls was +/- 9 4 %, and complete concordance for hit validation was observed between the solid phase assay and a standard solution assay
A glycosyltransferase assay can be used to identify inhibitors of a variety of carbohydrate processing enzymes, including the enzymes described herein, preferably core 2 GlcNAc-T, GlcNAc-TI and GlcNAc-TV
Lectin-sensitivity assays have been largely employed to study the carbohydrate patterns of cell lines By specifically binding to oligosacchande structures at the cell surface, lectins generally exert a cytotoxic effect causing growth disadvantage L-PHA is a lectin which recognizes tn- and tetra- antennary N-linked oligosaccharides carrying the structure (Galβl 4GlcNAcβl ,6)GaIβl,4- GlcNAcβl.2Manα), thus representing a valid probe for detection of β 1 6 branched complex-type oligosaccharides These structures are associated with tumor progression and appear on malignant cells (Dennis et al , 1986) [for example the murine lymphoreticular, highly metastatic, tumor model MDAY- D2 line (VanderElst and Dennis 1991)] Reduction and or truncation of cell surface N-hnked carbohydrate chains in MDAY-D2 cells is directly correlated with decreasing levels of L-PHA sensitivity and. in turn with improving cell proliferation even in the presence of the lectin Thus, such a system can be exploited for revealing any means blocking the biosynthesis of 1 6, branched N-hnked structures Given the functional significance of complex N-oligosacchaπdes during malignant transformation, large-scale L-PHA assays have been developed by the present inventors to identify compounds in the combinatorial libraries that are new inhibitors of the N-linked oligosacchande processing pathway
The terms "N-linked oligosacchande processing or 'N-linked oligosacchande processing pathway" refer to the biosynthetic pathway for the in vivo synthesis of glycoproteins with N-hnked oligosaccharides N-hnked oligosaccharides are linked to the amide N in the sidechain of Asn in the consensus sequence Asn-X-Ser/Thr of the protein moiety, where X can be any amino acid The method of the invention can be particularly applied to identify compounds that inhibit complex-type N-hnked oligosaccharides, in particular β 1 ,6- branched complex-tvpe oligosaccharides associated with tumor growth and metastasis N-linked oligosacchande processing involves the synthesis of a precursor molecule, transfer of the precursor to Asn by o gosaccharyltransferase followed by further processing by membrane-bound glucosidases and endoplasmic reticulum 1,2-mannosιdase. and transport from the rough endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi stacks In the Golgi stacks, further processing occurs depending on the final destination of the glycoprotein and it may involve lysosomal enzymes or nonlysosomal enzymes Complex and hybrid type oligosacchande chains are synthesized through the second nonlysosomal processing pathway and residues can be added bv enzymes including Golgi mannosidase I (α l.2 specific), and N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases I, II, and III (A description of the N-linked processing pathway mav be found at http //www uni mainz de/~frosc000/STRU22 html) Th e L-PHA method of the invention can be used to identify compounds that inhibit all steps in the N-linked oligosaccharide pathway prior to β 1,4 Gal transferase, including compounds that inhibit the carbohydrate processing enzymes described herein, and Golgi α-mannosidases.
In an embodiment of the invention, a fully automated enzymatic method is contemplated that is based on measurement of alkaline phosphatase activity. The method is based on the observation that the number of cells and their level of alkaline phosphatase activity are closely correlated. The method employs a colorimetric assay to monitor cell proliferation of transformed cells after L-PHA treatment. The reaction mixture is directly added to cells growing in their own medium. Thus, the method can be carried out in a single step, without removal of the culture medium or cell pelletting and washing, thereby permitting the fully automated procedures. The assay method is also highly reproducible (CV=4%) and inexpensive, thus representing a valuable tool when large-scale experiments are performed. The reaction is linear with time in a wide time interval (5-180 min), and the Km value of the enzyme for the substrate para-nitrophenylphosphate is relatively low (0.81 mM). Incubation time and substrate concentration can be changed in order to modulate the velocity of the reaction and adjust the protocol, for automation and timing purposes, to the number of samples. Use of a robotic platform also allows simultaneous processing of large numbers of samples, e.g. thirty-six 96-well plates.
Therefore, an automated method is provided for testing a compound for its ability to inhibit N- linked oligosaccharide processing comprising (a) incubating the compound with cells expressing N- linked oligosaccharides (preferably β 1 ,6 branched, complex-type oligosaccharides) in the presence of L-PHA, and measuring alkaline phosphatase activity; and (b) comparing to a control in the absence of the compound wherein higher alkaline phosphatase activity indicates that the compound has the ability to inhibit N-linked oligosaccharide processing. The method may be used to identify compounds which inhibit all steps in the N-linked oligosaccharide pathway prior to β l .-4 Gal-transferases, including compounds that inhibit the carbohydrate processing enzymes described herein, in particular N- acetylglycosaminyltransferases, including N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases I, II and V. The method may also be used to identify compounds that inhibit Golgi α-mannosidases.
The automated method of the invention can generally be used to identify antagonists of cell growth inhibitors, such as TGF-β, IL-lγ , TNFα, and IFN. Therefore, the invention broadly contemplates a method comprising (a) reacting a test compound with cells expressing N-linked oligosaccharides in the presence of a cell growth inhibitor; (b) measuring alkaline phosphatase activity
; and (c) comparing to a control in the absence of the test compound wherein an increase in alkaline phosphatase activity indicates that the compound has the ability to antagonize the cell growth inhibitor.
Cells which can be used in the methods of the invention include MDAY-D2, L1210, melanoma tumor cells, and human tumor cells such as S W 480, LS 174T, HT-29, WiDr, T2, MDA-231 , MCF7, BT-20, Hs578T, K562, Hs578T, SK-BR-3, CY 6T, MDA-468, H23. H157, H358, H1334, HI 155, H28, H460, Hmesol, H I 87, H510A, N417, H I 46. HI 092, H82 (Restifo. N. P. et al, J. Exper. Med. 177:265-272, 1993). The cell lines may contain either constitutive or inducible enzyme activity such as osteoblastic cell lines. Cell proliferation is measured by measuring alkaline phosphatase activity. Alkaline phosphatase may be measured using conventional methods for example by using para- nitrophenylphosphate as a substrate and measuring absorbance at about 405nm.
The conditions for carrying out the method will be selected having regard to the nature of the compound and the cells employed. For example, if the cells are MDAY-D2 tumor cells a concentration
3 3 of about 1-6 x 10 cells, preferably 5 x 10 may be used. The MDAY-D2 cells are generally cultured for about 10 to 30 hours, preferably 16 to 20 hours, followed by addition of L-PHA at a concentration of about 50 to 150 μg/mL, preferably 100 μg/mL. The alkaline phosphatase assay mixture may contain a buffer e.g. diethanolamine buffer, and para-nitrophenylphosphate at an initial concentration of about 1.5 to 4 mM, preferably 2 to 3 mM, most preferably 2.5 mM. Utility of Inhibitors
Small molecule inhibitors with appropriate selectivity and activity against a particular carbohydrate processing enzyme can be selected from the combinatorial libraries of the invention using high throughput screening bioassays. The selected small molecule inhibitors will have valuable pharmacological properties. In particular, the inhibitors will be useful in the treatment and prophylaxis of tumor growth and metastasis of tumors. Anti-metastatic effects of inhibitors can be demonstrated using a lung colonization assay. For example, melanoma cells treated with an inhibitor may be injected into mice and the ability of the melanoma cells to colonize the lungs of the mice may be examined by counting tumor nodules on the lungs after death. Suppression of tumor growth in mice by the inhibitor administered orally or intravenously may be examined by measuring tumor volume.
A small molecule inhibitor can have particular application in the prevention of tumor recurrence after surgery i.e. as an adjuvant therapy.
A small molecule inhibitor can be especially useful in the treatment of various forms of neoplasia such as leukemias. lymphomas. melanomas, adenomas, sarcomas, and carcinomas of solid tissues in patients. In particular, the small molecule inhibitors can be used for treating malignant melanoma, pancreatic cancer, cervico-uterine cancer, ovarian cancer, cancer of the kidney such as metastatic renal cell carcinoma, stomach, lung, rectum, breast, bowel, gastric, liver, thyroid, head and neck cancers such as unresectable head and neck cancers, lymphangitis carcinamatosis, cancers of the cervix, breast, salivary gland, leg, tongue, lip, bile duct, pelvis, mediastinum, urethra, bronchogenic, bladder, esophagus and colon, non-small cell lung cancer, and Kaposi's Sarcoma which is a form of cancer associated with HIV-infected patients with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). The inhibitors may also be used for other anti-proliferative conditions such as bacterial and viral infections, in particular AIDS.
A small molecule inhibitor of the present invention can be used to treat immunocompromised subjects. For example, they can be used in a subject infected with HIV, or other viruses or infectious agents including bacteria, fungi, and parasites, in a subject undergoing bone marrow transplants, and in subjects with chemical or tumor-induced immune suppression.
A small molecule inhibitor can be used as hemorestorative agents and in particular to stimulate bone marrow cell proliferation, in particular following chemotherapy or radiotherapy. The myeloprohferative activity of an inhibitor of the invention may be determined by injecting the inhibitor into mice, sacrificing the mice, removing bone marrow cells and measuring the ability of the inhibitor to stimulate bone marrow proliferation by directly counting bone marrow cells and by measuring clonogenic progenitor cells in methylcellulose assays The inhibitors can also be used as chemoprotectants and in particular to protect mucosal epithelium following chemotherapy
A small molecule inhibitor of the invention also can be used as an antiviral agent in particular on membrane enveloped viruses such as retroviruses, influenza viruses, cytomegalo viruses and herpes viruses A small molecule inhibitor can also be used to treat bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections For example, a small molecule inhibitor can be used to prevent or treat infections caused by the following Neisseria species such as Neisseria meningitidis. and N gonorrheae, Chlamvdia species such as Chlamvdia pneumomae Chlamydia psittaci Chlamvdia tnchomatis Eschertchia colt Haemophilus species such as Haemophilus influenza, Yersima enterocohtica Salmonella species such as S tvphmiurium, Shigella species such as Shigella flexnen. Streptococcus species such as S agalactiae and 5 pneumomae, Bacilllus species such as Bacillus subtilis Branhamella catarrhalts, Borreha burgdorfer Pseudomonas aeruginosa Coxiella burnetti Campvlobacter species such as C hyoilei, Helicobacter pylori, and, Klebsiella species such as Klebsiella pneumomae
A small molecule inhibitor can also be used in the treatment of inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, and atherosclerosis
A small molecule inhibitor can also be used to augment the anti-cancer effects of agents such as ιnterleukιn-2 and poly-IC. to augment natural killer and macrophage tumoπcidal activity, induce cytokine s>nthesιs and secretion, enhance expression of LAK and HLA class I specific antigens, activate protein kinase C stimulate bone marrow cell proliferation including hematopoietic progenitor cell proliferation, and increase engraftment efficiency and colony-forming unit activity, to confer protection against chemotherapy and radiation therap) (e g chemoprotective and radioprotective agents), and to accelerate recovery of bone marrow cellulanty particularly when used in combination with chemical agents commonly used in the treatment of human diseases including cancer and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) For example, a small molecule inhibitor can be used as a chemoprotectant in combination with anti-cancer agents including doxorubicin, 5-fluorouracιl, cyclophosphamide, and methotrexate, and in combination with isoniazid or NSAID The term "patient" herein refers to a warm-blooded animal such as a mammal which is afflicted with a particular disease state or condition as descπbed herein Examples of animals within the scope of the meaning of the term are dogs, cats, rats, mice, horses, bovine cattle, sheep, and humans
Small molecule inhibitors can be converted using customary methods into pharmaceutical compositions The pharmaceutical compositions contain the inhibitors either alone or together with other active substances Such pharmaceutical compositions can be for oral, topical, rectal, parenteral, local, inhalant, or mtracerebral use They are therefore in solid or semiso d form, for example pills, tablets, creams, gelatin capsules, capsules, suppositories, soft gelatin capsules, liposomes (see for example, U S Patent No 5,376,452), gels, membranes, and tubelets For parenteral and mtracerebral uses, those forms for intramuscular or subcutaneous administration can be used, or forms for infusion or intravenous or mtracerebral injection can be used, and can therefore be prepared as solutions of the inhibitors or as powders of the inhibitors to be mixed with one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients or diluents, suitable for the aforesaid uses and w ith an osmolaπty which is compatible with the physiological fluids For local use, those preparations in the form of creams or ointments for topical use or in the form of sprays should be considered, for inhalant uses, preparations in the form of sprays should be considered
The pharmaceutical compositions can be prepared by per se known methods for the preparation of pharmaceutically acceptable compositions which can be administered to patients, and such that an effective quantity of the active substance is combined in a mixture with a pharmaceutically acceptable vehicle Suitable vehicles are descπbed, for example, in Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences (Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, Mack Publishing Company, Easton, Pa , USA 1985) On this basis, the pharmaceutical compositions include albeit not exclusively, the inhibitors in association with one or more pharmaceutically acceptable vehicles or diluents, and contained in buffered solutions with a suitable pH and iso-osmotic with the physiological fluids
An inhibitor can be indicated as a therapeutic agent either alone or in conjunction with other therapeutic agents or other forms ot treatment (e g chemotherapy or radiotherapy) An inhibitor can be used to enhance activation of macrophages, T cells, and NK cells in the treatment of cancer and immunosuppressive diseases By way of example, an inhibitor can be used in combination with anti- proliferative agents, antimicrobial agents, immunostimulatory agents, or anti-inflammatones In particular, an inhibitor can be used in combination with anti-viral and/or anti-pro ferative agents, such as Th l cytokines including ιnterleukm-2, ιnterleukιn-12. and interferon-γ, and nucleoside analogues such as AZT and 3TC The compounds of the invention may be administered concurrently, separately, or sequentially with other therapeutic agents or therapies Compositions containing small molecule inhibitors can be administered for prophylactic and/or therapeutic treatments In therapeutic applications, compositions are administered to a patient already suffering from a disease or condition as described above, in an amount sufficient to cure or at least alleviate the symptoms of the disease and its complications An amount adequate to accomplish this is defined as a "therapeutically effective dose" Amounts effective for this use will depend on the seventy of the disease, the weight and general state of the patient, the nature of the administration route, the nature of the formulation, and the time or interval at which it is administered
In prophylactic applications compositions containing small molecule inhibitors are administered to a patient susceptible to or otherwise at risk of a particular disease Such an amount is defined to be a ' prophylactically effective dose" In this use the precise amounts depend on the patient's state of health and weight, the nature of the administration route, the nature of the formulation, and the time or interval at which it is administered
It will be appreciated that where major amounts are administered for a therapeutic or prophylactic treatment, it may be advisable to divide these into several administrations over the course ot a day The following examples illustrate the invention. EXAMPLE 1 Combinatorial Synthesis of GnT-V Inhibitors
Below, the synthesis of 5'-deoxy-5'-amino-2',3'-0-isopropylidinyl uridine and peptide- branched derivatives of 5'-deoxy-5'-amino-2',3'-0-isopropylidinyluridine are described. The invention contemplates intermediates, 2,3-0-isopropylidene-5-0-methanesulfonyl uridine, and 5-deoxy-5-azido- 2,3-O-isopropylidenyluridine derivatives. I. Synthesis of 5'-deoxy-5'-amino-2',3,-0-isopropylidenyl uridine
A. Preparation of 2,3-O-isopropylidenyluridine (Figure 1) Uridine (65.0 g, 266.2 mmoles), camphor sulfonic acid (1.0 g, 4.3 mmoles), 2.2-dimethoxy propane (98.0 mL, 798.5 mmoles), and acetone (anhydrous, 1000 mL) were stirred vigorously for 24 h at room temperature. The reaction was monitored by TLC (solvent system 7:93, MeOH:CHCl3). Once the starting material was consumed, triethylamine ( 1.12 mL, 8.6 mmol) was added and the mixture stirred for another one hour. The acetone was evaporated under reduced pressure (<40 °C) to give a white powder (77.0 g), which was used for the next step without any purification.
B. Preparation of 2.3-0-Isopropylidene-5-0-methane sulfonyl uridine (Figure 2)
The crude 2,3-0-isopropylidenyl uridine (77.0g; obtained in step A) was dissolved in DMF. Triethylamine (74.2 L) was added and the mixture was cooled to 0°C. Methanesulfonyl chloride (31.2 mL) was then added dropwise during a 30-60 min. period while rapid stirring continued. After an additional 1 hr of stirring at room temperature, the DMF was evaporated. The residue was dissolved in ethyl acetate (2.0 L) and washed three times with water (3 X 250 mL). The organic layer was dried over MgS04 , filtered, the filter cake rinsed with some EtOAc and the solvent evaporated. The light yellow residue (thick syrup) was used directly for the next step without further purification. The reaction was monitored by TLC (7:3, ethyl acetate : hexane). C. Preparation of 5- azido-5-deoxy -2,3-O-isopropylidenyl uridine (Figure 3)
The crude mesylate (obtained from step B above) was dissolved in DMF (400 mL, reagent grade) and stirred at 60°C with sodium azide (34.6g, 532 mmol) for 12 hrs until complete consumption of the mesylate was observed by TLC (TLC 7:3, ethyl acetate: hexane). The mixture was filtered through a Celite bed. The filtrate was evaporated to dryness. The residue was dissolved in ethyl acetate (2.0 L) and washed three times with water (3 X 250 L). The organic layer was dried over MgS04 and evaporated under reduced pressure at 30°C. The solid residue was recrystallized from ethyl acetate/hexane (1 : 1) to afford 65.0g of the desired azido uridine as a white crystalline solid (mp 118°C ). Η NMR (500 MHz, CD3OD): 1.34, 1.53 (2s, 6H); 3.52 (dd, 1H, J = 4.4, 12.9 Hz); 3.6 (dd, 1H, J = 5.9, 12.9 Hz); 4.2 (ddd, 1 H, J = 4.4, 4.4, 6.2 Hz); 4.8 (dd, 1H, J= 4.2, 6.2 Hz); 5.06 (dd, 1H, 2.3, 6.2 Hz); 5.7 (d, 1H, J = 7.8 Hz); 5.78 (d, 1 H, J = 2.2 Hz); 7.65 (d, 1 H, J = 8.0 Hz).
D. Preparation of 5-amino-5-deoxy -2,3-O-isopropylidenyl uridine (Figure 4)
5.0g of azide was dissolved in ethanoi ( 150-200mL). To this solution, Pd(OH)2 and NaHC03 was added. The reaction flask was evacuated and filled with H2 gas. This was repeated three times and the mixture was stirred for 3-6h at room temperature under H2. The mixture was filtered through a Celite bed and evaporated. The residue was used for capping and peptide coupling reactions. Η NMR (500 MHz. CDCI3): 1.35. 1.57 (2s, 6H); 2.95 (dd, 1 H. J = 6.0, 13.6 Hz); 3.06 (dd, 1 H, J = 4.6, 13.6 Hz); 4.1 (appear as dd, in fact it is ddd, 1 H, J = 4.3, 4.35, 6.4 Hz); 4.76 (dd, 1 H, J= 4.5, 6.4 Hz); 4.95 (dd, 1H, 2.6, 6.4 Hz); 5.7 (d, 1H, J = 2.4 Hz); 5.73(d, 1H, J = 8.1 Hz); 7.38(d, 1H, J = 8.2 Hz). II. Coupling Procedure (Figure 5)
Free amine (Figure 5) was dissolved in dichloromethane (250 mL) and WSC.HC1 [l-ethyl-3- (3'-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide .HC1, 1.2 eq] was added. To this clear solution, N-t- butoxycarbonyl protected amino acids (1.0 eq) were added and stirred under argon for 1-3 h. The reaction was monitored by TLC (7: 93, MeOH/CHCl3). After the reaction was complete, more dichloromethane was added and the solution washed with water (for a few amino acids like glutamine, ω-nitroarginine, asparagine water wash is not possible, because the derivatives are water soluble), and the organic layer was dried over MgS04 and evaporated . The residue was purified by column chromatography (eluent 2-5% MeOH in CH2C12) to give white solids. Yields vary from 75-85%). This procedure was performed on 25.0g scales. In a similar fashion, free amine (1 eq), N-FMOC-protected amino acids (l . leq) and HBTU in DMF ( 1.1 eq) were reacted to give N-FMOC protected uridine monopeptides.
III. N-Boc Deprotection (Figure 6)
Uridine peptides (Figure 6) were treated separately with TFA/CHC13/H20 (3:4: 1 ) at room temperature for 12 hours. Excess reagent and solvent were evaporated under reduced pressure. The residue was dissolved in methanol, treated with OH' resin until neutral, filtered, and evaporated to dryness.
IV. Capping (Figure 8)
Fully deprotected uridine monopeptide and dipeptide derivatives were treated separately with capping reagents (acyl chloride, isocyanate, and thioisocyanate, 1.2 eq) and diisopropylethyl amine (1.5 eq) in DMF at room temperature. After 12h, solvent was removed and the residues were dissolved in methanol. These solutions were treated with aminomethylated polystyrene resin for 48 hours to quench excess capping reagent. Mixtures were filtered, evaporated, and dissolved in DMSO.
N-t-Boc and N-FMOC-deprotected dipeptides ( 1 eq) were also capped with various carboxylic acid caps (1.05-1.2 eq) in the presence of HBTU (1.05-1.2 eq) in DMF. The solvent was evaporated under reduced pressure (temp < 60°). The residues were dissolved in 8/8/1 [MeCN/MeOH/H20], and then filtered individually through a pad of basic alumina in a 96-well format using polytronics filter plates. The solvents were again evaporated under reduced pressure (< 40°), and the residues diluted in DMSO for storage and testing.
Fully deprotected monopeptide and dipeptide derivatives were also successfully capped separately with a variety of carboxylic acids (1.1 equiv.) with ethyl diisopropylamine in DMF via a carbodiimide coupling with or without HOBT or by an HBTU assisted protocol. EXAMPLE 2 ABBREVIATIONS
Gal D-galactose GalNAc D-N-acetylgalactosamine
GlcNAc D-N-acetylglucosamine
FCS fetal calf serum
T transferase A solid-phase glycosyltransferase assay was developed for drug screening.
Glycosyltransferases catalyze the formation of giycosydic linkages between monosaccharides donated by sugar-nucleotide. and specific oligosaccharide acceptors. The solid-phase assay was illustrated for core 2 GlcNAc-T and can be adapted for other glycosyltransferases. The assay utilizes multivalent oligosaccharide acceptors linked to polymer coated plastic plates and thereby eliminates the need for chromatographic separation of product. MATERIALS AND METHODS
Chemicals: Poly[N-(acryloyloxy)succinimide] (pNAS) (I. Figure 9) with a viscosity-average molecular weight Mv of 42.1 kDa (DP -250) was prepared according to Mam en et al. (Mammen et al J. Med. Chem., 38, 4179-41901995) . Disaccharide Galβl-3GalNAcα-0(CH2)3S(CH2)2NH2 (2) (core 2 GlcNAc-T acceptor) and [GlcNAc(β l -2)]Man(β l-6)Glc(β-0(CH2)3S(CH2)NH2) were prepared from the corresponding allyl glycoside following a procedure described by Roy and Tropper (R. Roy and F.D. Tropper. J. Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun. 1058 ( 1988); Glycoconjugate J. 5:203 ( 1988)). Galβl-
3GalNAcα-pNp and GalNAcα-polymers UDP-6-[JH]-N-acetylglucosamine ( 16.0 Ci/mmol) were purchased from Toronto Research Chemicals (Toronto. Canada) while non labelled UDP-6-N- acetylglucosamine was obtained from Sigma Chemicals.
Glycopolymer syntheses: Poly[N-(acryloyloxy)succinimide] (1 ) was first treated at room temperature with the amine-terminated T-antigen disaccharide 2 in DMSO ( 16 h) to provide a core copolymer containing one sugar residue for every ten N-substituted acrvlamide residues. The active ester- containing polymer was then treated at room temperature for three hours with excess primary amines (ammonia, methylamine, ethylamine, or propylamine) to give four different copolymers 3-6 having the same comonomer ratios but differing by the lipophilicity of the copolymer backbones. The glycopolymers were then purified by size exclusion chromatography over BioGel P- 10 using water as eluent. Alternatively, disaccharide 2 was treated with methacryloyl chloride and the resulting monomer was copolymerized with methacrylamide to provide copolymer 8, while direct copolymerization of allyl glycoside precursor of 2 with acrvlamide gave copolymer 10. Using the same strategy, copolymer acceptors 11-14 for GlcNAc-T V were prepared using the same core pNAS 1 and molar ratios of acrylamide:sugar of 10: 1 (Figure 10).
Recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T: A truncated form of core 2 GlcNAc-T cDNA, lacking 37 amino acids from the N-terminus was prepared by PCR. The truncated cDNA was cloned in-frame into pPROTA vector (Sanchez-Lopez et al., J. Biol. Chem. 263. 1 1892- 1 18991988) for expression as a secreted protein A chimeric protein. The expression vector was co-transfected into CHO cells, along with pSV2neo, in a 10: 1 molar ratio, using a calcium phosphate method. Cells were cultured in the presence of 800 μg/mL of G418. and resistant cell clones were selected, and tested for core 2 GlcNAc- T activity in culture medium. The representative clone 614 C2 showed stable expression of core 2 GlcNAc-T activity, and was selected for enzyme production The cells were routinely propagated in MEM medium containing 5% Fetal Bovine Serum and G418 (0 2 g/mL) IgG-Sepharose Fast FlowTm beads (Pharmacia Biotech) were added in a ratio of 5 μl of a 50% bead slurry, 2 5 μl of 2 M Tπs»HCl pH 8 0, and 5 μl of 10% Tween-20 per mL of culture medium Following incubation on a rocking platform at 4°C for 20 h, the beads were collected by centπfugation, washed with 10 volumes of TST buffer (50 mM Tπs«HCl pH 8 0 150 mM NaCl, 0 05% Tween-20) and 2 volumes of 5 mM NH4Ac pH 5 0 The recombinant ProtA-core 2 GlcNAc-T enzyme was then eluted with 1 volume 0 5 M acetic acid pH 3 4 and resuspended in 3 volumes of 0 5 M MES pH 7 5 (Calbiochem) One μU of enzyme activity is defined as the amount of protein forming 1 pmol/min of reaction product Solid phase Core 2 GlcNAc-T assay: A stock solution of the core 2 acceptor glycopolymer 3 was prepared by re-suspending the acceptor in water to a concentration of 1 25 mg/mL and then incubating the solution at 60°C for 1 h The solution was gently mixed at 15 min intervals during this time to allow the polymer to unwind and become fully dissolved The glycopolymer solution was not vortexed since strong agitation may cause shearing of the polymer backbone Sodium azide (0 05%) was added as a preservative and the stock solution of glycopolymer was stored at room temperature Wallac 96- well Printed Rigid Sample Plates (1450-51 1 Wallac. FI) were used in all cases for the solid phase assay To prepare the plates for coating with acceptor, the wells were washed twice with 100 μl of methanol and then rinsed 3 times with 200 μl of water After allowing the plates to dry at room temperature, the wells were coated with acceptor by adding 60 ul of a 33 3 μg/mL of glycopolymer solution and incubated overnight at room temperature Following the incubation unbound glycopolymer was removed by washing 3 times with 200 μl water and the remaining liquid in wells was allowed to evaporate by incubating the plates at 37°C (or room temperature) for approximately 1 h Dried-coated plates could be used immediately or sealed and stored for use at a later date
T he HTS core 2 GlcNAc-T assay consisted of 20 μl of test compound, 20 ul of 3x assay buffer consisting of 90 mM MES pH 6 7 10 mM EDTA (Sigma), 0 0075 mM UDP-GlcNAc (Sigma) and 0 1 μCi of UDP-[Η]Glc Ac (16 Ci/mmol, Toronto Research Cnemicals) and 20 μl of recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T (containing 8- 10 μU/μl) per reaction in 96 well plates To minimize pipetting, the enzyme and the 3x buffer were routinely combined and 40 μl of the enzyme-buffer mix was added to the wells following the addition of the test compounds After incubating the plates at 25°C for 60 min, the reactions were stopped by adding 175 μl of water to each well, aspirating the contents and washing 4 times with 190 ul water The radioactive signal was measured using a MicroBeta plate counter (Wallac. FI) after adding 100 μl of OptiPhase Supermix scintillation cocktail (Wallac) to each well and incubating for >2 h, to allow for mixing Each plate in HTS had 4 controls with vehicle added rather than test extracts, and background was determined with the omission of enzyme, also 4 wells per plate Background was subtracted for each plate, and HTS results were expressed as a percentage of control reactions on the plate The HTS assays were run on a Beckman integrated robotic platform using a Biomek 200 pipetting station and Zymar rotating robotic arm PanLabs (Seattle, WA) supplied a collection of 30,000 bacterial and fungal extracts in 96 well plates The dried extracts were resuspended in DMSO, and diluted into water at 0.15% DMSO for the core 2 GlcNAc-T HTS.
Solution Phase core 2 GlcNAc-T assays. The core 2 GlcNAc-T solution phase assay mixture was similar to that used in earlier studies (Yousefi et al., J.Biol.Chem. 266: 1772-1783, 1991 ; Williams et al.. J.Biol.Chem. 255: 1 1253-1 1261 , 1980) but was adapted for automation on the Beckman robotic platform. For HTS assays, 10 μl of test extract, 10 μl of 3x assay buffer (90 mM MES pH 6.7, 10 M EDTA, 3 mM Galβl-3GalNAcα-pNp as acceptor, 3 M UDP-GlcNAc (Sigma) and 0.1 μCi of UDP- [3H]GlcNAc ( 16 Ci/mmol; Toronto Research Chemicals), and 10 μl of recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T enzyme (4-5 μU activity) was added to wells of the titre plate. Reactions in a total volume 30 μl were incubated for 1-2 h at 37 C and stopped by adding 200 μl cold water. Plates were processed immediately or stored at -20 C. To recover the product, the assay mix was aspirated through C18 packed pipette tips (BGBS96C 18 BiotipsTra, National Scientific) and the packing was then washed 3 times with 200 μl of HoO. Bound product was eluted into β-scintillation counting plates (Wallac 96- well Printed Rigid Sample Plate; 1450-51 1 ) by washing the C 18 packing 3 times with 100 μl of 100% ethanol. The eluates were then dried overnight at room temperature to remove the ethanol and the radioactive signal was counted in a β-scintillation counter after the addition of counting fluid. Reaction products were found to accumulate in a linear manner for up to 2 hours of incubations. The C18 packed tips were cleaned and regenerated following the processing steps by washing once with 200 μl ethanol and then 3 times with 100 μl of H~>0. RESULTS
Glycopolymers for solid-phase glycosyltransferase assays:
The disaccharide acceptor Galβl-3GalNAcα-R where R is either octylmethyl or paranitophenyl has been used routinely in solution core 2 GlcNAc-T assays where UDP-[Η]GlcNAc is the sugar-nucleotide donor. The product, Galβl-3([3H]GlcNAcβl-6)GalNAcα-R is captured on Ci solid support, eluted with ethanol, and measured in a β-counter ( Yousefi et al, J.Biol.Chem. 266: 1772- 1783, 1991). This procedure has been miniaturized and automated, but remains relatively slow compared to high throughput (HTS) ELISA-style assays. The glycopolymers with Galβl-3GalNAcα- groups were prepared by chemical synthesis and reacted with recombinant ProtA-core 2 GlcNAc-T to establish the condition for the solid-phase glycosyltransferase assays. The water-soluble glycopolymer acceptors (3-8, 10, and 11-14 Figure 9) used in the solid-phase glycosyltransferase assay are polyvalent substrates composed of N-substituted polyacrylamide backbones containing one disaccharide Galβl- 3GalNAcα-0(CH2)3S(CH2)2 (2) or trisaccharide [GlcNAc(β l -2)]Man(βl -6)Glc(β-0(CH2)3S(CH2)) residues for every ten acrylamide backbone monomers. The viscosity-average molecular weight Mv of the core polymer was determined to be 42.1 kDa based on polyacrylamide derived from 1 by treatment with aqueous ammonium alone. The ratio of sugar to acrylamide of one to ten was determined using high field H-NMR spectroscopy and was based on previous optimization experiments using analogous glycopolymers in enzyme-linked lectin assays (ELLA) (Roy, Trends in Glycoscience and Glycotech. 8:79-99 1996). The copolymer backbones were modified with various alkylamines to enhance their lipophilicity and thus, increase their adsorption behaviors to the surface of the polystyrene microtiter plates.
Copolymers 6 and 14, having the most lipophilic N-propylacrylamide backbones, were about eight times more sensitive than either N-ethyl (5, 13) or acrylamide (3, 11) copolymers while copolymers 4 and 12, having an N-methyl substituent, were the least effective coating acceptor. Copolymer 10, containing a shorter allyl spacer was also found unsuitable for the enzymatic glycosylation, presumably because of the inaccessibility of the GalNAc residues in the enzyme's active site. Similarly, copolymers 7 (co-biotin) or 8 (co-methacrylamide) provided either poor coating or poor enzymatic glycosylation. Biotin-containing copolymer 7 was initially designed to serve as coating substrate after capture by streptavidin/avidin pre-coating. Glycopolymer 6, having the most lipophilic N-propylacrylamide backbone, was about eight times more effective than either N-ethyl (5) or acrylamide (3) glycopolymers while glycopolymer 4, having an N-methyl substituent, was the least effective coating acceptor. Coating plastic wells with glycopolymer. Early in the development of the solid-phase assay, variable results were observed with different batches of plastic plates. A number of pre-wash solutions were tested for their ability to improve the consistency of the core 2 GlcNAc-T reaction. Pre-washing the plastic with organic solvents improved the signal by 2-4 fold and eliminated variability between different lots of plates. Washing with non-ionic detergent reduced reaction efficiency. Based on these results, the 96 well plastic plates were routinely washed twice with methanol, then twice with water and stored dry prior to coating with the glycopolymer 3. Washing of plastic plates was performed on the Beckman 2000 workstation with robotic arm. The time and temperature dependency for coating the wells with glycopolymer was determined, and overnight coating with 2 μg/mL at 20°C was determined to be optimal. Glycopolymer 3 was determined to be in excess, as the recovered solution of polymer was used to coat wells subsequently, and produce 80-90% of the reaction product realized with the first coating. However, glycopolymer solutions were routinely used only once.
Characterization of the Core 2 GlcNAc-T solid-phase assay In the initial experiments, 96 well plates were coated with a solution of 2 μg/well of glycopolymer acceptor 3, and the reaction products were observed to be proportional to added enzyme over 60 minutes. However, the Km for UDP-GlcNAc, and for acceptor using ProtA-core 2 GlcNAc-T in the solution assay was determined to be 1.75 mM and 146 μM respectively. In contrast, the solid-phase glycosyltransferase reaction conditions employ substrates well below Km concentrations, as the amount of glycopolymer 3 bound to the plastic is limiting. Therefore, the sugar-nucleotide concentration is adjusted to optimize the detection of radioactive product and is also below Km concentrations. To establish that the substrates are not exhausted during the 60 minute reaction, a time course and titration of UDP-GlcNAc was performed at 37°C. At higher concentrations of UDP-GlcNAc, the reaction went to completion in less than 5 minutes. However, with UDP-GlcNAc at 2.5 μM, and 200 μU of enzyme activity, the core 2 GlcNAc- T reaction product accumulated in a time-dependent manner for 30-60 minutes. The maximal product formed was 6- 10 pmoles per well, and when 2.5 μM UDP-GlcNAc was used in the reaction, this represented approximately 4% utilization of the sugar-nucleotide donor. To simplify the HTS protocol. these conditions (2 5 μM UDP-GlcNAc, 200 uU enzyme) were then further tested at room temperature (approximately 20°C) Under these conditions, product accumulation was found to be linear with time for approximately 60 min. and thus, the HTS assay was routinely performed at room temperature Glycopolymer acceptors for GlcNAc-TV were also made and tested using recombinant enzyme (Figure 10) Similar to that observed for core 2 GlcNAc-T, glycopolymer 14, with the most lipophilic N-propylacrylamide backbone more effective than either N-ethyl (13) or acrylamide (11) glycopolymers. Glycopolymer 12, an N-methyl substituent linker was the least effective coating acceptor. The GlcN Ac-TV reactions product using glycopolymer 14 accumulated m a time and enzyme dependent manner
Core 2 GlcNAc-T high-throughput screen (HTS) ofmicrobial extracts. A microbial library of 30,000 extracts was subjected to HTS using the core 2 GlcNAc-T solid-phase assay as the primary screen (le glycopolymer 3) Normalized results from a typical run ot 1 ,600 assays are shown in Figure 1 1 The signal to noise was 20-fold and the C V of the positive controls was ±9 4 % assay A series of 48 hit extracts, chosen from the total primary screen data (le >50% inhibition) were placed on plates with 88 other inactive extracts and re-tested in a 5 point dilution series using both the solid-phase and solution core 2 GlcNAc-T assays 94 4 % ( 17/18) of the hits identified in the solution assay were also hits in the solid phase assay Additional hits. 3 with good and 8 with inconclusive titration curves were observed in the solid-phase assay Active extracts identified in the core 2 GlcNAc-T HTS can be fractionated to identify active molecules for further testing in cell culture and animal models of disease DISCUSSION
A solid phase glycosyltransferase assay was optimized for use with recombinant core 2 GlcNAc-T The assay was also tested with glycopolymer acceptors for GlcNAc-TV and GlcNAc-TI and shown to be acceptable for other glycosyltransferase enzymes The solid-phase core 2 GlcNAc-T assay was used in a HTS of a library of microbial extracts and active extracts were confirmed with a high degree of concordance in the solid-phase and a conventional solution assay The solid-phase assay format allowed 5-6 fold increase in throughput compared to a solution phase assay, for a rate of 7,500 per day
The core 2 GlcNAc-T HTS of 30.000 microbial extracts yielded hits at a frequency of 1 5% in the solution assay One third of the library was also screened using the solid phase assay and yielded a high degree of concordance with the results previously found with the solution assay EXAMPLE 3
High Throughput L-PHA Assay Matenals and Methods Chemicals. L-PHA, Triton X- 100 and /?αra-nιtrophenyIphosphate were obtained from Sigma, diethanolamine was purchased from Fisher
Cells. The origin and properties ot the DBA-2 strain lymphoreticular tumor MDAY-D2 have been previously described (Kerbel, RS, Floπan, M, Man, MS, Dennis, J and McKenzie IF (1980) J Natl Cancer Inst , 64, 1221- 1230) Cells were cultured in α-modified Eagle s medium containing 2% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum (Gibco BRL) at 37°C in a 95%0 '5%CO humidified atmosphere
Alkaline phosphatase assay Determinations were carried out using 96-well plates Each well contained a variable number of MDAY-D2 cells maintained in 125 μl of culture medium supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum The alkaline phosphatase reaction was initiated by adding 75 μl of assay mixture ( 1 M diethanolamine buffer, pH 9 8. 2 mM MgCl . 1% Triton X-100 and 2 5 mM para- nitrophenylphosphate) and incubated at 37 C for up to 90 min The reaction was stopped with 80 μl of 3 5 M NaOH After 15-30 min of colour development, absorbance of the chromogenic product para- mtrophenol was measured at 405 nM using a multiwell scanning photometer (Thermomax Multiplate Reader, Molecular Devices) Background values were determined through assays performed on culture medium alone in the absence of cells and routinely subtracted Linearity between the absorbance at 405 nM and concentration of/?αra-nιtrophenol was in the range 0-2 5 (ε = 17 23 mM 'cm ') Screening via L-PHA assays The procedure was completely automated by using a robotic workstation (Biomek 2000, Beckman) capable of processing nine 96-well plates simultaneously Determinations were performed in flat bottom 96-well plates (88 samples + 8 controls per plate) Each well (columns 1-1 1) received 10 μl of compound (in 2 5% DMSO), while 10 ul of 2 5% DMSO in water was added to column 12 All 96 wells received 5x 10 MDAY-D2 cells in 90 μl culture medium supplemented with
2% FCS After 16-20 h incubation at 37 C, 25 μl of L-PHA ( 100 μg/mL in culture medium) was added to the first 1 1 columns and to 4 wells of the 12th (positive control) The other 4 wells received 25 μl of medium supplemented with 2% FCS (negative control) Assay plates were maintained for 30-36 h at 37°C, and alkaline phosphatase activity was measured according to the protocol descπbed above using an incubation time of 1 h Cell density was subconfluent throughout the course of the assay Proliferation indices were expressed as percentage values, calculated with the formula
Normalized Signal = (A405 of sample - mean A 05 positive control)/(mean A405 negative control - mean A405 positive control)
RESULTS
In homogeneous screening assays the results are determined without washing or transferring target proteins or cells, reactants. and test compounds from the assay plates Homogeneous assay formats save time in performing the assay, and with less manipulation, the low errors are observed This translates into fewer follow-up assays on putative hits in a large screen A homogeneous cell- based assay has been developed that measures cell growth and variability using endogenous alkaline phosphatase activity
MDAY-D2 tumor cells maintained in tissue culture in log phase of growth exhibit alkaline phosphatase activity in the range 40-80 nmol/h/10 cells Alkaline phosphatase measurements were linear over time for at least 90 min. and directly proportional to cell number, allowing detection of 1500 cells MDAY-D2 doubling time calculated through accumulation of alkaline phosphatase activity was ~14h. similar to that measured by counting cells. The alkaline phosphatase assay is comparable in reproducibility and sensitivity, with a commercially available, chemiluminometric method.
The apparent Km of alkaline phosphatase measured in the MDAY-D2 whole cell assay was 0.86 mM, whereas the value exhibited by the soluble enzyme present in fetal calf serum was 0.21 mM. Background activity present in culture medium containing 2% FCS produced an A405 of 0.2 after lh of incubation and represented approximately 10% of the signal with the standard assay conditions.
Swainsonine blocks α-mannosidase II, acting as an inhibitor of complex-type N- oligosaccharide biosynthesis resulting in resistance to the toxicity of L-PHA lectin. Swainsonine protected MDAY-D2 cells from L-PHA toxicity with an IC30 value of 0.0528 +/- 0.0087 μM (n =8). An IC50 value of 0.2 μM was previously reported using thymidine incorporation as a measure of cell growth (Dennis et al. 1993, Biochem. Pharmacol., 46, 1459-1466).
The alkaline phosphatase cell assay was applied to high-throughput screening of a microbial extract library. The signal to noise ratio (i.e. growth of L-PHA-treated/control MDAY-D2 cells) was 5 and the coefficient of variation of both negative and positive control samples was 4.2% and 2.4%, respectively. Twenty microbial extracts of the 30,000 tested increased cell viability in the presence of L-PHA to a degree greater than 3xSD of the mean. These fell on the right-hand side of normal distribution Figure 12). On re-testing, 4 of the 20 extracts were confirmed as hits for further fractionation. A number of extracts suppressed growth below that observed in the presence of L-PHA (i.e. left of the normal distribution). These likely contain compounds that are generally toxic, and not of interest.
DISCUSSION
The proliferation rate of MDAY-D2 cells was monitored by employing an assay of alkaline phosphatase activity. The motivation for this work was to establish a simple, reproducible and cost- effective procedure to be applied for high throughput screenings via L-PHA assay. A colorimetric determination of alkaline phosphatase activity has been found suitable to measure lymphokine- dependent B cell proliferation (Hashimoto N and Zubler RH ( 1986) J. Immunol. Methods 90, 97-103.); the advantage of the protocol described herein is that the method can be carried out in a single step, without removal of the culture medium or cell pelletting and washing, thereby permitting fully automated procedures. Furthermore, use of a robotic platform allowed simultaneous processing of thirty-six 96-well plates. The method is very cost-effective, especially when compared to other commercially available assay kits.
Sensitivity and accuracy of the alkaline phosphatase method are based upon several observations: i) MDAY-D2 cells express relatively high levels of enzyme, whereas background activity present in fetal calf serum (2%) is low; ii) readings of A405 were found to be proportional to the concentration of reaction product: iii) the reaction is linear with time within a relatively wide interval of up to 1.5h; and, iv) the numbers of MDAY-D2 cells (both untreated and L-PHA-treated) correlated
3 5 with enzyme activity within a relatively wide range (i.e. 1x10 up to 2.5x10 cells). The assay was performed using ImM substrate (final concentration), 4-fold above the Km of the serum enzyme (i.e.
0.21 mM) and similar to that of the cellular enzyme (i.e. 0.86 mM). With this 4-fold difference in Km values, the signal to background ratio may be amplified by increasing the substrate concentration above ImM
The assay was proven reliable by several indicia For example, when swainsonine, a known inhibitor of N-linked oligosacchande processing, was employed in conjunction with the L- PHA alkahne phosphatase assay, the IC50 of the drug compared well with that previously reported using thymidine incorporation to measure cell growth Additionally, the results of the cell proliferation measurements corresponded to those obtained using another single-step, commercially available chemilummometnc kit Finally, during the screening of extract libraries (30,000 samples), control measurements of alkaline phosphatase activity (n=3200) showed coefficient of variations which were markedly low
While the present invention has been descπbed with reference to what are presently considered to be the preferred examples, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed examples To the contrary, the invention is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims All publications, patents and patent applications are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference in its entirety
Table 1
Figure imgf000032_0001
Figure imgf000033_0001
Table 2
3-deoxy-D-manno-octulosonιc acid (KDO) transferase
Chlamydia pneumomae KDO transferase gb z31593 Chlamvdia psittact KDO transferase gb x8006I
Chlamydia psittaci gseA transferase gb x69476 Chlamvdia trichomatts KDO transferase gb m64618
Chlamydia trachomatis gseA transferase gb z22653 gb :22654 gb z22655 gb z22656 gb z22659 Escherichia coli kdtA gb m60670 gb m86305 gb u00039 sw p23282 (kdta_ecolι)
Haemophilus influenzae kdtA gb 145293 gb u32748 sw p44806 (kdta haem) O-antigen Gal-2— fucosyltransferase
Yersima enter ocohtica fucosyltransferase gene gb ul8674 gb u25113 gb u46859 eld (chain length determining) (similar to putative undecaprenyl-P— GlcNAc transferase) Escherichia colt cldl gb z!7241 sw q05032 (cldl ecoli)
Escherichia coli cld2 gb m89934 sw p35272 (cld2_ecolι) Salmonella typhimurium eld gb zl 7278 sw q04866 (cld ialty) Shigella flexnert eld gb x71970 sw p37792 (cld_shιfl) cpsD galactosyltransferase Streptococcus agalactiae cpsD gene gb 109116 lgtA galactosyltransferase
Rhtzobium legummosarum Allaway et al (1996) unpublished gb x94963 murG N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase
Bacillus subtihs murG gene gb s56399 gb x64259 mraY phospho-N-acetylmuramoylpentapeptide synthase EC 2.7.8.13 Bacillus subtilis mraY gene gb zl5056 sw q03521 (mray bacsu) Escherichia coli mraY gene gb x51584 gb x55034 gb dl0483 sw pl5876 (mray_ecolι) mtfA, mtfB, mtfC mannosyltransferases
Escherichia coli mtfA, mtfB and mtfC genes gb dl3231 gb d43637 neuS 28-sιalvltransferase
Escherichia coli neuS gene gb x60598 nodC N-acetylglucosammyltransferase
Azotorhizobium caulinodans gb 118897 sw q07740 (nodc_azoca) Bradyrhizobium elkami gb u04609 rfaB 1,6-galactosyltransferase
Escherichia coli rfaB gene gb m80599 gb u00039 w p27127 (rfab_ ecolι) Salmonella tvphimunum rfaB gene gb s56361 sw q06994 (rfab_salty) rfaC heptulosyltransferase 1
Escherichia coli rfaC gene gb u00039 sw p24173 (rfac _ecolι) rfaG glucosyltransferase
Escherichia coli rfaG gene sw p25740 (rfag_ecolι) rfal 1,3-galactosyltransferase EC 2.4.1.44
Escherichia coli rfal gene gb m80599 gb u00039 sw p27I28 (rfaι_ecolι) Salmonella typhimurium rfal gene gb x53847 sw pi 9816 (rfat_salty) Table 2 Cont'd rfaJ 1,2-glucosyltransferase EC 2.4.1.58 Escherichia coli rfaJ gene sw p27129 (rfaj ecoli)
Salmonella typhimurium rfaJ gene sw pi 9817 (rfaj_saltv) rfaK 1,2-N-acetylglucosamιnyltransferase EC 2.4.1.56
Escherichia coli rfal gene gb u00039 sw p27242 (rfaι_ecolι) rfbF galactosyltransferase Campylobacter hvoilei rfbF gene gb x91081
Klebsiella pneumomae rfbF gene gb I31762 gb 141518 rfbN rhamnosyltransferase
Salmonella typhimurium rfbN gene gb x56793 rfbP galactosyltransferase Yersima enterocolitica rflP gene gb u 18674 gb u25113 gb u46859
Salmonella enter tea rfbP gene gb x61917 rfbQ rhamnosyltransferase
Salmonella enteric a rfbQ gene gb x61917 rfbU manπosyltransferase Salmonella tvphimurium ϋ gene gb x56793 sw p26402 (rfbu_saltv) rfbW second mannosyltransferase
Salmonella enter ica rfb W gene gb x61917 rfbZ first mannosyltransferase
Salmonella enter ica rfbZ gene gb x61917 rfe undecaprenyl-P— GlcNAc transferase
Escherichia col rfe gene gb s75640 gb m87049 gb m76129 sw p24235 (rfe_ecolι) Mycobacterium leprosum rfe gene gb uI5186 sw p45830 (rfe nycle) rffM probable N-acetyl-D-mannosaminuronic acid transferase
Escherichia coli rffM gene gb m87049 sw p27836 (rffm_ecolι) Salmonella typhimurium rffM gene gb m95047 sw p37457 (rffm_saltv) rffT probable 4— fucosyltransferase
Escherichia coli rffT gene gb m87049 sw p27835 (rfft_ecolι) Salmonella tvphimurium rffT gene gb m95047 sw p37458 (rfft_saltv) RhlAB rhamnosyltransferase Pseudomonasaeruginosa rhlAB gene gb 128170
Glycosyltransferase locus of 1 . gonorrhoeae U S Patent No 5,703.367 to Gotsch ch
Table 3
Figure imgf000036_0001
Figure imgf000036_0002
Table 4
Figure imgf000037_0001
Figure imgf000037_0002
Table 5
Figure imgf000038_0001
q = 0 or 1
Figure imgf000038_0002

Claims

WE CLAIM:
1. A combinatorial library comprising a predetermined collection of nucleoside peptide molecules for inhibiting the transfer of a sugar from a selected sugar nucleotide donor to a selected acceptor by a carbohydrate processing enzyme wherein a nucleoside peptide molecule comprises (a) a nucleoside monomer; (b) a spacer monomer coupled to the nucleoside monomer wherein the spacer monomer comprises one or more amide linked amino acid residues or mimetics thereof; and (c) cap monomers attached to the spacer monomer; wherein the nucleoside peptide molecules differ from each other as to the identity of at least one element of the nucleoside monomer, spacer monomer or cap monomers.
2. A combinatorial library as claimed in claim 1 wherein the carbohydrate processing enzyme is a glycosyltransferase involved in the biosynthesis of glycoproteins, glycolipids, or glycosyl phosphatidyl inositols.
3. A combinatorial library as claimed in claim 2 wherein the carbohydrate processing enzyme is an N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I, II, II, IV, or V, or ╬▓-l,3-galactosyl-0-glycosyl-glycoprotein ╬▓ 1 ,6-N-acetylgucosaminyl transferase (core 2 GlcNAc).
4. A combinatorial library as claimed in claim 1, 2, or 3 wherein the nucleoside monomer is uridyl, 2'-deoxyuridyl, or 5'-amino-5'deoxy-2',3'-0-isopropylidineuridyl.
5. A combinatorial library as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein the cap monomer is methyl (Me), formyl (CHO), ethyl (Et), acetyl (Ac), t-butyl (t-bu), anisyl, trifluoroacetyl (Tfa), benzoyl (Bz), 4-methylbenzyl (Meb), thioanizyl, thiocresyl, benzyloxymethyl, 4-nitrophenyl
(Pnp), benzyloxycarbonyl (Z), 2-nitrobenzoyl (NBz), 2-nitrophenylsulphenyl (Nps), 4- toluenesulphonyl (Tosyl, Tos), pentafluorophenyl (Pfp), diphenylmethyl (Dp ), 2- chlorobenzyloxycarbonyl (Cl-Z), 2,4,5-trichlorophenyl, 2-bromobenzyloxycarbonyl (Br-Z), triphenylmethyl (Trityl, Trt), 2,2,5,7,8-pentamethyl-chroman-6-sulphonyl (Pmc), t- butyloxycarbonyl (Boc), benzyl (Bzl), benzyloxymethyl (Bom), and 9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl
(Fmoc).
6. A combinatorial library as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein the spacer monomer is a single amide linked amino acid, an amide linked dipeptide, or an amide linked tripeptide, or a mimetic thereof.
7. A nucleoside peptide molecule comprising a nucleoside monomer; a spacer monomer coupled to a nucleoside monomer, wherein the spacer monomer comprises one or more amide linked amino acid residues, or a mimetic thereof; and cap monomers attached to the spacer monomer.
8. A nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I:
Figure imgf000039_0001
where X is H, -COOH, -OS03H, or (CH2)qS03H where q is 0 or 1. and R represents (Y)m where Y is an amide linked amino acid residue and m is 1-3, Z' and Z are the same or different and represent hydroxyl or alkoxy, or Z' and Z together form an acetonide group, and wherein free NH2 groups in the compound of the formula I are capped with a cap monomer.
9. A nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I as claimed in claim 8 wherein X is H, -COOH, -OS03H, or (CH2)qS03H where q is 0 or 1, Z and Z' are both hydroxyl or together form an acetonide group, R represents -NHCOR1, wherein R1 represents
(a) wherein R2 is alkoxy; or
Figure imgf000040_0001
(b) -CHR3R4 wherein R3 is hydrogen or -NH2, and R4 is R5 is
Figure imgf000040_0002
halogen, alkyl, or alkoxy, -CH2N(CH3)CH,CH2R6 or - N(CH3)CH,CH,R6
Figure imgf000040_0003
wherein R is halogen,
-CH,N(CH3)CO-i -CH,N(C2H5)CH,CH(CH3)OH, or -CH,NHCOCH(CH3)2, or
R4 represents (CH2)ΓÇ₧R8 wherein n = 0 to 5, R8 is halogen, R 9' wherein R9 is
alkoxy,
Figure imgf000040_0004
-N(CH3)CH,CH2R* wherein R10 is halogen, - 2H5)CH2CH(CH3)OH, -NHCOCH(CH3)2 and wherein free amino groups are protected with a cap monomer.
10. A nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I as claimed in claim 8 wherein X is -COOH, and R represents -NHCOR1 wherein R1 represents -CHR3R4 wherein R3 is hydrogen, and R4 is (CH2)nR8
wherein n = 0 to 5, preferably 1 to 4, R8 is halogen, wherein R9 is alkoxy, halogen, or alkyl,
Figure imgf000040_0007
Figure imgf000040_0005
Figure imgf000040_0006
or -N(CH3)CH2CH2 10 wherein R10 is halogen, -N(C2H5)CH2CH(CH3)OH, or -NHCOCH(CH3)2
1 1. A nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I as claimed in claim 8 wherein . X is -COOH, and R represents -NHCOR' wherein R1 represents -CHR3R4 wherein R' represents -NH2, and R4
is V VR5 wherein R5 is halogen, alkyl or alkoxy,
Figure imgf000041_0001
-CH,N(CH3)CH2CH2R6 wherein R6 is halogen, -CH,N(C,H5)CH,CH(CH3)OH,
CH,NHCOCH(CH3)2
Figure imgf000041_0002
12. A nucleoside peptide molecule of the formula I as claimed in claim 8 wherein X is -OS03H, or (CH2)qS03H where q is 0 or 1, R represents -NHCOR1 wherein R1 represents -CHR R4 wherein R3 represents -NH,, and R4 is
wherein R5 is halogen, alkyl, or alkoxy, -CH,N(C,H5)CH2CH(CH3)0H, or
Figure imgf000041_0003
-CH2NHCOCH(CH3)2.
13. A process for preparing a combinatorial library containing a predetermined collection of nucleoside peptide molecules for inhibiting the transfer of a sugar from a selected sugar nucleotide donor having a heterocyclic amine base, to a selected acceptor by a carbohydrate processing enzyme comprising:
(a) coupling one or more amino acids, or mimetics thereof to a nucleoside monomer unit which comprises a heterocyclic amine base coupled to a sugar wherein the base corresponds to the heterocyclic amine base of the sugar nucleotide donor, or a modified form or analogue of the base; and
(b) capping any free functional groups or amine groups with a cap monomer unit.
14. A method of using a combinatorial library as claimed in claim 1 for screening for pharmacologically active molecules.
15. A solid-phase bioassay for identifying a compound having inhibitory activity against a carbohydrate processing enzyme which comprises (a) coupling an acceptor for the carbohydrate processing enzyme to a polymer and coating onto a carrier; (b) adding a carbohydrate processing enzyme, a sugar nucleotide donor labeled with a detectable substance, and a test compound; (c) measuring the detectable change produced by the detectable substance; and (d) comparing to a control in the absence of the test compound wherein a decrease in the amount of detectable substance with the test compound indicates that the test compound has inhibitory activity against the enzyme.
16. A method for identifying a compound that inhibits N-linked oligosaccharide processing comprising (a) reacting a test compound with cells expressing N-linked oligosaccharides in the presence of L-PHA and measuring alkaline phosphatase activity; and (b) comparing to a control in the absence of the compound wherein an increase in alkaline phosphatase activity indicates that the compound inhibits N-linked oligosaccharide processing.
17. A pharmaceutical composition containing a compound identified by a method as claimed in any one of claims 14, 15, or 16. ,
PCT/CA1999/000550 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same WO1999064378A2 (en)

Priority Applications (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2000553388A JP2002517474A (en) 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound libraries and high-throughput assays for screening them
CA002334338A CA2334338A1 (en) 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same
AU44930/99A AU4493099A (en) 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same
MXPA00012237A MXPA00012237A (en) 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same.
EP99927613A EP1086064A2 (en) 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same
NO20006244A NO20006244L (en) 1998-06-10 2000-12-08 Corrected combinatorial compound library and high yield analyzes for screening thereof

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US8882898P 1998-06-10 1998-06-10
US60/088,828 1998-06-10
US12056299P 1999-02-17 1999-02-17
US60/120,562 1999-02-17

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1999064378A2 true WO1999064378A2 (en) 1999-12-16
WO1999064378A3 WO1999064378A3 (en) 2000-09-21

Family

ID=26779099

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/CA1999/000550 WO1999064378A2 (en) 1998-06-10 1999-06-10 Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same

Country Status (8)

Country Link
EP (1) EP1086064A2 (en)
JP (1) JP2002517474A (en)
CN (1) CN1314913A (en)
AU (1) AU4493099A (en)
CA (1) CA2334338A1 (en)
MX (1) MXPA00012237A (en)
NO (1) NO20006244L (en)
WO (1) WO1999064378A2 (en)

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2001009141A1 (en) * 1999-07-29 2001-02-08 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Polymerizable biotin derivatives, biotin polymer, and polymer responsive to avidin stimulation
WO2001034622A1 (en) * 1999-11-08 2001-05-17 Origenix Technologies, Inc. Combinatorial library synthesis and pharmaceutically active compounds produced thereby
WO2001085215A2 (en) * 2000-05-11 2001-11-15 Glycozym Aps METHODS OF MODULATING FUNCTIONS OF POLYPEPTIDE GalNAc TRANSFERASES AND OF SCREENING SUBSTANCES THEREFOR, PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING SUCH AGENTS
WO2002100152A2 (en) * 2000-03-27 2002-12-19 Micrologix Biotech, Inc. Solution-phase combinatiorial library synthesis and pharmaceutically active compounds produced thereby
US7256179B2 (en) 2001-05-16 2007-08-14 Migenix, Inc. Nucleic acid-based compounds and methods of use thereof
US7338932B2 (en) 2000-05-11 2008-03-04 Glycozym Aps Methods of modulating functions of polypeptide GalNAc-transferases and of screening test substances to find agents herefor, pharmaceutical compositions comprising such agents and the use of such agents for preparing medicaments
US8722583B2 (en) 2002-10-30 2014-05-13 Nuevolution A/S Method for selecting a chemical entity from a tagged library
US8791053B2 (en) 2002-09-27 2014-07-29 Mpm-Holding Aps Spatially encoded polymer matrix
US10669538B2 (en) 2001-06-20 2020-06-02 Nuevolution A/S Templated molecules and methods for using such molecules
US10731151B2 (en) 2002-03-15 2020-08-04 Nuevolution A/S Method for synthesising templated molecules
US10730906B2 (en) 2002-08-01 2020-08-04 Nuevolutions A/S Multi-step synthesis of templated molecules
US11118215B2 (en) 2003-09-18 2021-09-14 Nuevolution A/S Method for obtaining structural information concerning an encoded molecule and method for selecting compounds
US11225655B2 (en) 2010-04-16 2022-01-18 Nuevolution A/S Bi-functional complexes and methods for making and using such complexes
US11702652B2 (en) 2005-12-01 2023-07-18 Nuevolution A/S Enzymatic encoding methods for efficient synthesis of large libraries

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
ATE450609T1 (en) 2002-12-19 2009-12-15 Nuevolution As SYNTHESIS METHOD GUIDED BY QUASI-RANDOM STRUCTURES AND FUNCTIONS
EP1597395A2 (en) 2003-02-21 2005-11-23 Nuevolution A/S Method for producing second-generation library
JP2006527719A (en) * 2003-06-19 2006-12-07 エフ.ホフマン−ラ ロシュ アーゲー Method for preparing 4'-azidonucleoside derivatives
CN102796147A (en) * 2005-10-04 2012-11-28 阿尔卡米亚有限公司 Compounds library
WO2011127325A1 (en) * 2010-04-07 2011-10-13 Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Selection and use of host cells for production of glycoproteins

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1995010296A1 (en) * 1993-10-12 1995-04-20 Glycomed Incorporated A library of glyco-peptides useful for identification of cell adhesion inhibitors
WO1995034294A1 (en) * 1994-06-15 1995-12-21 Yissum Research Development Company Of The Hebrew University Of Jerusalem Controlled release oral drug delivery system

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1995010296A1 (en) * 1993-10-12 1995-04-20 Glycomed Incorporated A library of glyco-peptides useful for identification of cell adhesion inhibitors
WO1995034294A1 (en) * 1994-06-15 1995-12-21 Yissum Research Development Company Of The Hebrew University Of Jerusalem Controlled release oral drug delivery system

Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7052917B1 (en) 1999-07-29 2006-05-30 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Polymerizable biotin derivatives, biotin polymer, and polymer responsive to avidin stimulation
WO2001009141A1 (en) * 1999-07-29 2001-02-08 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Polymerizable biotin derivatives, biotin polymer, and polymer responsive to avidin stimulation
WO2001034622A1 (en) * 1999-11-08 2001-05-17 Origenix Technologies, Inc. Combinatorial library synthesis and pharmaceutically active compounds produced thereby
US6620796B1 (en) 1999-11-08 2003-09-16 Micrologix Biotech Inc. Combinatorial library synthesis and pharmaceutically active compounds produced thereby
WO2002100152A2 (en) * 2000-03-27 2002-12-19 Micrologix Biotech, Inc. Solution-phase combinatiorial library synthesis and pharmaceutically active compounds produced thereby
WO2002100152A3 (en) * 2000-03-27 2003-04-03 Origenix Technologies Inc Solution-phase combinatiorial library synthesis and pharmaceutically active compounds produced thereby
US7338932B2 (en) 2000-05-11 2008-03-04 Glycozym Aps Methods of modulating functions of polypeptide GalNAc-transferases and of screening test substances to find agents herefor, pharmaceutical compositions comprising such agents and the use of such agents for preparing medicaments
WO2001085215A2 (en) * 2000-05-11 2001-11-15 Glycozym Aps METHODS OF MODULATING FUNCTIONS OF POLYPEPTIDE GalNAc TRANSFERASES AND OF SCREENING SUBSTANCES THEREFOR, PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING SUCH AGENTS
WO2001085215A3 (en) * 2000-05-11 2002-06-27 Henrik Clausen METHODS OF MODULATING FUNCTIONS OF POLYPEPTIDE GalNAc TRANSFERASES AND OF SCREENING SUBSTANCES THEREFOR, PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING SUCH AGENTS
US7709449B2 (en) 2001-05-16 2010-05-04 Migenix, Inc. Nucleic acid-based compounds and methods of use thereof
US7256179B2 (en) 2001-05-16 2007-08-14 Migenix, Inc. Nucleic acid-based compounds and methods of use thereof
US10669538B2 (en) 2001-06-20 2020-06-02 Nuevolution A/S Templated molecules and methods for using such molecules
US10731151B2 (en) 2002-03-15 2020-08-04 Nuevolution A/S Method for synthesising templated molecules
US10730906B2 (en) 2002-08-01 2020-08-04 Nuevolutions A/S Multi-step synthesis of templated molecules
US8791053B2 (en) 2002-09-27 2014-07-29 Mpm-Holding Aps Spatially encoded polymer matrix
US8722583B2 (en) 2002-10-30 2014-05-13 Nuevolution A/S Method for selecting a chemical entity from a tagged library
US10077440B2 (en) 2002-10-30 2018-09-18 Nuevolution A/S Method for the synthesis of a bifunctional complex
US11001835B2 (en) 2002-10-30 2021-05-11 Nuevolution A/S Method for the synthesis of a bifunctional complex
US11118215B2 (en) 2003-09-18 2021-09-14 Nuevolution A/S Method for obtaining structural information concerning an encoded molecule and method for selecting compounds
US11965209B2 (en) 2003-09-18 2024-04-23 Nuevolution A/S Method for obtaining structural information concerning an encoded molecule and method for selecting compounds
US11702652B2 (en) 2005-12-01 2023-07-18 Nuevolution A/S Enzymatic encoding methods for efficient synthesis of large libraries
US11225655B2 (en) 2010-04-16 2022-01-18 Nuevolution A/S Bi-functional complexes and methods for making and using such complexes

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CN1314913A (en) 2001-09-26
MXPA00012237A (en) 2002-11-15
CA2334338A1 (en) 1999-12-16
EP1086064A2 (en) 2001-03-28
AU4493099A (en) 1999-12-30
JP2002517474A (en) 2002-06-18
NO20006244L (en) 2001-02-08
WO1999064378A3 (en) 2000-09-21
NO20006244D0 (en) 2000-12-08

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
WO1999064378A2 (en) Directed combinatorial compound library and high throughput assays for screening same
Winn et al. Antimicrobial nucleoside antibiotics targeting cell wall assembly: Recent advances in structure–function studies and nucleoside biosynthesis
Kimura et al. Recent advances in antimicrobial nucleoside antibiotics targeting cell wall biosynthesis
Bugg et al. Phospho-MurNAc-pentapeptide translocase (MraY) as a target for antibacterial agents and antibacterial proteins
Serpi et al. Nucleoside derived antibiotics to fight microbial drug resistance: new utilities for an established class of drugs?
Van Heijenoort Recent advances in the formation of the bacterial peptidoglycan monomer unit
Wiegmann et al. Muraymycin nucleoside-peptide antibiotics: Uridine-derived natural products as lead structures for the development of novel antibacterial agents
AU2012223012C1 (en) Phosphoramidate derivatives of 5 - fluoro - 2 &#39; - deoxyuridine for use in the treatment of cancer
NZ532882A (en) Method for identification of tumor targeting enzymes
JP2008069162A (en) Dna methyl transferase inhibitor
US20030088061A1 (en) Materials and methods to modulate ligand binding/enzymatic activity of alpha/beta proteins containing an allosteric regulatory site
WO1999061583A2 (en) Carbohydrate-based scaffold compounds, combinatorial libraries and methods for their construction
US10988508B2 (en) Synthetic N-acetyl-muramic acid derivatives and uses thereof
US7906460B2 (en) Active-site engineering of nucleotidylyltransferases and general enzymatic methods for the synthesis of natural and “unnatural” UDP- and TDP-nucleotide sugars
JP2002501931A (en) MurG substrate analog, method for producing the same and assay using the same
AU736999B2 (en) Saccharide derivatives
US20030027980A1 (en) Process for preparing lipid ii
Röper et al. Click chemistry for drug discovery
Mugnaini et al. Research on L-nucleosides. Synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of L-and D-2′, 3′-dideoxy-3′-[tris (methylthio) methyl]-β-pentofuranosyl nucleosides
EP1417223B1 (en) Process for preparing lipid ii
Zhou Peptidoglycan fragment microarray platform for human immune system investigation
Konietzny Enzymatic and chemical synthesis of sequence-defined macromolecules presenting oligosaccharides
Bryskier et al. Peptidoglycan synthesis inhibitors
CN115710594A (en) Method for synthesizing uridine diphosphate-6-azido-D-galactose
IE832491L (en) Sparsomycin (sc-rs) derivatives.

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 99809486.2

Country of ref document: CN

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): AE AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CU CZ DE DK EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SL SZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A3

Designated state(s): AE AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CU CZ DE DK EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A3

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SL SZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 508492

Country of ref document: NZ

Ref document number: 44930/99

Country of ref document: AU

ENP Entry into the national phase in:

Ref document number: 2334338

Country of ref document: CA

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1999927613

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: PA/a/2000/012237

Country of ref document: MX

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 09701315

Country of ref document: US

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1999927613

Country of ref document: EP

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

NENP Non-entry into the national phase in:

Ref country code: CA

WWW Wipo information: withdrawn in national office

Ref document number: 1999927613

Country of ref document: EP