| Literature DB >> 29934601 |
Saulius Vainauskas1, Charlotte H Kirk1, Laudine Petralia1,2, Ellen P Guthrie1, Elizabeth McLeod1, Alicia Bielik1, Alex Luebbers1, Jeremy M Foster1, Cornelis H Hokke2, Pauline M Rudd3, Xiaofeng Shi1, Christopher H Taron4.
Abstract
Exoglycosidases are often used for detailed characterization of glycan structures. Bovine kidney α-fucosidase is commonly used to determine the presence of core α1-6 fucose on N-glycans, an important modification of glycoproteins. Recently, several studies have reported that removal of core α1-6-linked fucose from N-glycans labeled with the reactive N-hydroxysuccinimide carbamate fluorescent labels 6-aminoquinolyl-N-hydroxysuccinimidylcarbamate (AQC) and RapiFluor-MS is severely impeded. We report here the cloning, expression and biochemical characterization of an α-fucosidase from Omnitrophica bacterium (termed fucosidase O). We show that fucosidase O can efficiently remove α1-6- and α1-3-linked core fucose from N-glycans. Additionally, we demonstrate that fucosidase O is able to efficiently hydrolyze core α1-6-linked fucose from N-glycans labeled with any of the existing NHS-carbamate activated fluorescent dyes.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29934601 PMCID: PMC6015026 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-27797-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1NHS-carbamate activated dyes and their attachment to the reducing end of N-glycans. (a,b) A comparison of the chemical linkage of two versions of 2-aminobenzamide (2-AB) to the reducing end GlcNAc of the chitobiose core of an N-glycan is shown (the blue highlighted R denotes the remaining portion of the N-glycan). (a) Standard 2-AB is added via reductive amination chemistry and creates an acyclic form of GlcNAc, whereas, (b) InstantAB is added via reactive NHS-carbamate chemistry and creates a urea linkage to a cyclic form of GlcNAc. In both panels, attachment of core fucose to the C6 position of GlcNAc is shown in pink highlight to illustrate its proximity to the label. (c) Structural features of the various NHS-carbamate activated dyes that are currently available for glycan analysis.
Figure 2Biochemical properties of fucosidase O. The pH dependence (a), metal ion effect (b) and fucosidase activity at different temperatures (c) were determined. The 2-AB labeled core-fucosylated N-glycans M3N2F and NA2F were used as substrates to define the properties of fucosidase O. All experiments were performed in triplicate.
Figure 3Substrate specificity and glycosidic bond preference of recombinant fucosidase O. Each oligosaccharide substrate (14 pmol) was mixed with fucosidase O or BKF (1.5 U/mL and 0.085 U/mL final concentration, respectively), and the reaction mixes were incubated at 37 °C. Aliquots were taken at each time point and glycans were analyzed by UPLC-HILIC-FLR. The chromatograms were integrated to measure the peak areas of the resulting glycans, and the percentage of fucose removal was calculated. Open squares indicate the glycans treated with fucosidase O; black diamonds indicate the glycans treated with BKF.
Figure 4Core fucose removal from glycans labeled with different NHS-carbamate labels. (a) Complex N-glycans of human IgG labeled with RapiFluor-MS (8 pmol) were incubated with fucosidase O (35 U/mL) or BKF (2 U/mL) at 37 °C for 16 hours. After treatment, the glycans were analyzed by UPLC-HILIC-FLR. (b) Each N-glycan standard (2 pmol of NA2F-InstantAB, NA2F-InstantPC and NGA2F-RapiFluor-MS) was incubated with fucosidase O (35 U/mL) or BKF (2 U/mL) at 37 °C for 16 hours. The glycans were analyzed by UPLC-HILIC-FLR. The chromatograms were integrated to measure the peak areas of the resulting glycans, and the percentage of fucose removal was calculated. The experiments were performed in triplicate.
Figure 5A schematic summary representation of recombinant fucosidase O specificity observed in this study. Observed cleavage of fucose from different positions of various N-glycans (left), 2′fucosyllactose (upper right) and lacto-N-fucopentaose (lower right) substrates is shown with black arrows. Outer arm α1-3 fucose was blocked when terminal galactose was present (arrow with X).