Abstract
Metabolic oligosaccharide engineering (MOE) has
fundamentally contributed to our understanding of protein glycosylation.
Efficient MOE reagents are activated into nucleotide-sugars by cellular
biosynthetic machineries, introduced into glycoproteins and traceable by bioorthogonal
chemistry. Despite their widespread use, the metabolic fate of many MOE
reagents is only beginning to be mapped. While metabolic interconnectivity can
affect probe specificity, poor uptake by biosynthetic salvage pathways may
impact probe sensitivity and trigger side reactions. Here, we use metabolic
engineering to turn the weak alkyne-tagged MOE reagents Ac4GalNAlk
and Ac4GlcNAlk into efficient chemical tools to probe protein
glycosylation. We find that bypassing a metabolic bottleneck with an engineered
version of the pyrophosphorylase AGX1 boosts nucleotide-sugar biosynthesis and
increases bioorthogonal cell surface labeling by up to two orders of magnitude.
Comparison with known azide-tagged MOE reagents reveals major differences in
glycoprotein labeling, substantially expanding the toolbox of chemical
glycobiology.