A novel family of sugar-specific phosphodiesterases that remove zwitterionic modifications ofN-acetylglucosamine

Author:

Fossa Samantha L.ORCID,Anton Brian P.,Kneller Daniel W.ORCID,Petralia Laudine M.C.ORCID,Boisvert Madison L.,Ganatra Mehul B.,Vainauskas Saulius,Chan S. Hong,Hokke Cornelis H.ORCID,Foster Jeremy M.ORCID,Taron Christopher H.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe zwitterions phosphorylcholine (PC) and phosphoethanolamine (PE) are often found esterified to certain sugars in polysaccharides and glycoconjugates in a wide range of biological species. One such modification involves PC attachment to the 6-carbon ofN-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc-6-PC) in N-glycans and glycosphingolipids (GSLs) of parasitic nematodes, a modification that helps the parasite evade host immunity. Knowledge of enzymes involved in the synthesis and degradation of PC and PE modifications is limited. More detailed studies on such enzymes would contribute to a better understanding of the function of PC modifications and have potential application in the structural analysis of zwitterion-modified glycans. In this study, we used functional metagenomic screening to identify phosphodiesterases encoded in a human fecal DNA fosmid library that remove PC from GlcNAc-6-PC. A novel bacterial phosphodiesterase was identified and biochemically characterized. This enzyme (termed GlcNAc-PDase) shows remarkable substrate preference for GlcNAc-6-PC and GlcNAc-6-PE, with little or no activity on other zwitterion-modified hexoses. The identified GlcNAc-PDase protein sequence is a member of the large endonuclease/exonuclease/phosphatase (EEP) superfamily where it defines a distinct subfamily of related sequences of previously unknown function, mostly fromClostridiumbacteria species. Finally, we demonstrate use of GlcNAc-PDase to confirm the presence of GlcNAc-6-PC in N-glycans and GSLs of the parasitic nematodeBrugia malayiin a glycoanalytical workflow.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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