Synthesis and conformational studies of N-glycosylated analogs of the HIV-1 principal neutralizing determinant

Abstract
The principal neutralizing determinant (PND) of HIV-1 is found in the V3 loop of the envelope glycoprotein. Antibodies elicited by peptides from this region, containing the GlyProGlyArgAlaPhe (GPGRAF) sequence, were able to neutralize diverse HIV-1 isolates [Javaherian et al. (1990) Science 250, 1590-1593]. The GPGR tetrapeptide was predicted to adopt a type II beta-turn conformation. Earlier, we showed that glycosylation of synthetic T cell epitopic peptides at natural glycosylation sites stabilized beta-turns [Otvös et al. (1991) Int. J. Pept. Protein Res. 38, 467-482]. To evaluate the secondary structure modifying effect of the introduction of an N-glycosylated asparagine residue and to find a correlation between conformation and a possible PND potential, a series of glycopeptide derivatives, N(sugar) GPGRAFY-NH2 (4a-f), have been prepared, together with the parent peptides GPGRAFY-NH2 (2) and NGPGRAFY-NH2 (3), by solid-phase peptide synthesis [sugars: (a) beta-D-glucopyranosyl (Glc); (b) beta-D-galactopyranosyl (Gal); (c) Glc-beta(1----4)-Glc; (d) 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranosyl (GlcNAc); (e) 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-galactopyranosyl (GalNAc); (f) GlcNAc-beta(1----4)-GlcNAc; sugars are attached through a beta (1----N beta) linkage to asparagine (N).] Peptides 2-4 were characterized by amino acid analysis, reversed-phase HPLC, and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry. Circular dichroism (CD) and Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopic studies were performed in trifluoroethanol (TFE) and water (D2O was used in FT-IR experiments). Nonglycosylated peptides showed significantly different CD spectra in aqueous and TFE solution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)