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November 28, 2023

Two synthetic molecules developed to help elucidate cellular functions

Researchers at Gifu University's Institute for Glyco-core Research have developed two synthetic approaches to produce a fragment of a molecule called poly(ADP-ribose). By developing two ways to synthesize the fragment, researchers may be able to better understand how it contributes to vital functions in the cell. Credit: Hiromune Ando and Hide-Nori Tanaka
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Researchers at Gifu University's Institute for Glyco-core Research have developed two synthetic approaches to produce a fragment of a molecule called poly(ADP-ribose). By developing two ways to synthesize the fragment, researchers may be able to better understand how it contributes to vital functions in the cell. Credit: Hiromune Ando and Hide-Nori Tanaka

A sugar-based molecule naturally produced by the body can help cells grow, differentiate into different types, self-destruct if need be and much more. It helps protect the cell's genome, repair DNA, and regulate how genes are passed down. The molecule, called poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose) or poly(ADP-ribose), can potentially inform disease prevention and treatments鈥攊f scientists can figure out exactly how it works.

To facilitate such scientific discovery, researchers at Gifu University's Institute for Glyco-core Research (iGCORE) in Japan developed two synthetic versions of an ADP-ribose fragment.

They published their approach in the .

When cells make new proteins, they translate the genetic instructions to machinery that can build the proteins. During that process, some molecules or can bind to the protein as a post-translational modification. The poly(ADP-ribose) fragment, known as ribosyl adenosine 5鈥,5鈥测-diphosphate, could help reveal specific cellular functions, but naturally occurring fragments are too varied for scientists to attribute broad functions.

Although poly(ADP-ribose) occurs naturally, the molecular fragment鈥攃alled ribosyl adenosine 5',5"-diphosphate鈥攙aries too widely for researchers to infer broad functions. Credit: Hiromune Ando and Hide-Nori Tanaka
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Although poly(ADP-ribose) occurs naturally, the molecular fragment鈥攃alled ribosyl adenosine 5',5"-diphosphate鈥攙aries too widely for researchers to infer broad functions. Credit: Hiromune Ando and Hide-Nori Tanaka
Researchers developed two synthetic approaches to produce the poly(ADP-ribose) fragment. Both approaches may help researchers scale production of more uniform fragments for use in studies aimed at more precisely understanding their role in cellular health. Credit: Hiromune Ando and Hide-Nori Tanaka
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Researchers developed two synthetic approaches to produce the poly(ADP-ribose) fragment. Both approaches may help researchers scale production of more uniform fragments for use in studies aimed at more precisely understanding their role in cellular health. Credit: Hiromune Ando and Hide-Nori Tanaka

"The problem is lack of the availability of homogeneous oligo- and poly(ADP-ribose) samples, which are necessary for molecular-level studies to elucidate their detailed functions," said co-corresponding author Hide-Nori Tanaka, an assistant professor at iGCORE. Oligo- and poly(ADP-ribose) refers to the number of components that bind together to make up the ADP-ribose molecule.

"To address this bottleneck and accelerate ADP-ribose biology, we developed two practical synthetic approaches to ribosyl adenosine 5',5"-diphosphate, a fragment of poly(ADP-ribose), for providing structurally well-defined ADP-ribose oligomer and polymer."

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The first method involved a stepwise assembly using a commercially available solution to produce a framework to which the researchers then added carbohydrates. The second approach was streamlined into a single step where researchers processed a known molecule that can bind to other molecules from a commercially available solution. Both methods produced a common precursor that converts into a conjugation-ready building block that is primed for application in ADP-ribose synthesis, according to Tanaka.

"The next step is ADP-ribose oligomer synthesis using the building block we prepared in this paper," Tanaka said. "Our ultimate goal is to elucidate the detailed functions of oligo- and poly(ADP-ribose) by chemical biology approach using synthetic ."

More information: Rui Hagino et al, Synthetic Approaches to Ribosyl Adenosine 5鈥,5鈥测测怐iphosphate Fragment of Poly(ADP鈥恟ibose), European Journal of Organic Chemistry (2023).

Journal information: European Journal of Organic Chemistry

Provided by Institute for Glyco-core Research (iGCORE), Tokai National Higher Education and Research System

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