| Literature DB >> 30737276 |
Immacolata Speciale1, Garry A Duncan2, Luca Unione3, Irina V Agarkova4,5, Domenico Garozzo6, Jesus Jimenez-Barbero3,7,8, Sicheng Lin9, Todd L Lowary9, Antonio Molinaro10, Eric Noel4,11, Maria Elena Laugieri12, Michela G Tonetti12, James L Van Etten13,5, Cristina De Castro14.
Abstract
The chlorovirus Paramecium bursaria chlorella virus 1 (PBCV-1) is a large dsDNA virus that infects the microalga Chlorella variabilis NC64A. Unlike most other viruses, PBCV-1 encodes most, if not all, of the machinery required to glycosylate its major capsid protein (MCP). The structures of the four N-linked glycans from the PBCV-1 MCP consist of nonasaccharides, and similar glycans are not found elsewhere in the three domains of life. Here, we identified the roles of three virus-encoded glycosyltransferases (GTs) that have four distinct GT activities in glycan synthesis. Two of the three GTs were previously annotated as GTs, but the third GT was identified in this study. We determined the GT functions by comparing the WT glycan structures from PBCV-1 with those from a set of PBCV-1 spontaneous GT gene mutants resulting in antigenic variants having truncated glycan structures. According to our working model, the virus gene a064r encodes a GT with three domains: domain 1 has a β-l-rhamnosyltransferase activity, domain 2 has an α-l-rhamnosyltransferase activity, and domain 3 is a methyltransferase that decorates two positions in the terminal α-l-rhamnose (Rha) unit. The a075l gene encodes a β-xylosyltransferase that attaches the distal d-xylose (Xyl) unit to the l-fucose (Fuc) that is part of the conserved N-glycan core region. Last, gene a071r encodes a GT that is involved in the attachment of a semiconserved element, α-d-Rha, to the same l-Fuc in the core region. Our results uncover GT activities that assemble four of the nine residues of the PBCV-1 MCP N-glycans.Entities:
Keywords: DNA viruses; N-linked glycosylation; Paramecium bursaria chlorella virus 1 (PBCV-1); bioinformatics; capsid protein; glycosyltransferase; molecular modeling; nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR); post-translational modification (PTM)
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30737276 PMCID: PMC6462530 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.007182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157