Common glycosaminoglycan depolymerization
strategies are illustrated
through the example of heparan sulfate/heparin. (A, left) When glycosidases
are used to depolymerize GAG chains, the resulting cleavage preserves
the hexuronic acid stereochemistry. Enzymes with endolytic activity
are required to obtain oligosaccharides covering the full sequence.
As for moderately sulfated HS/heparin chains, using heparanase as
endo β-glucuronidases cleaves at the reducing end of GlcA residues
(A, right). Prokaryotic lyases, such as heparinase I–III, follow
a β-eliminative mechanism, resulting in Δ4,5-unsaturated
uronic acid residues at the new nonreducing end. Consequently, stereochemical
information is lost in the process (B, left). Benzyl esterification
with alkaline β-elimination mimics lyase activity and creates
Δ4,5-unsaturated uronic acid residues at the new nonreducing
end (B, right). While preserving hexuronic acid stereochemical information
at the cleavage site, deamination cleavage alters the structure of
the glucosamine through the formation of 2,5-anhydromannose. N-Acetyl
groups on glucosamines block the reaction, making prior deacetylation
necessary. Reproduced from ref (3). Copyright 2022, American Chemical Society.