| Literature DB >> 31747390 |
Hong Li1,2, Michael Marceau3, Tiandi Yang4, Tingting Liao2, Xiaoqiong Tang1, Renwei Hu5, Yan Xie5, Hong Tang1, Alfred Tay2, Ying Shi1, Yalin Shen1, Tiankuo Yang1, Xuenan Pi6, Binit Lamichhane2, Yong Luo7, Aleksandra W Debowski2,8, Hans-Olof Nilsson2, Stuart M Haslam4, Barbara Mulloy4, Anne Dell4, Keith A Stubbs8, Barry J Marshall2,9, Mohammed Benghezal1,2.
Abstract
The lipopolysaccharide O-antigen structure expressed by the European Helicobacter pylori model strain G27 encompasses a trisaccharide, an intervening glucan-heptan and distal Lewis antigens that promote immune escape. However, several gaps still remain in the corresponding biosynthetic pathway. Here, systematic mutagenesis of glycosyltransferase genes in G27 combined with lipopolysaccharide structural analysis, uncovered HP0102 as the trisaccharide fucosyltransferase, HP1283 as the heptan transferase, and HP1578 as the GlcNAc transferase that initiates the synthesis of Lewis antigens onto the heptan motif. Comparative genomic analysis of G27 lipopolysaccharide biosynthetic genes in strains of different ethnic origin revealed that East-Asian strains lack the HP1283/HP1578 genes but contain an additional copy of HP1105 and JHP0562. Further correlation of different lipopolysaccharide structures with corresponding gene contents led us to propose that the second copy of HP1105 and the JHP0562 may function as the GlcNAc and Gal transferase, respectively, to initiate synthesis of the Lewis antigen onto the Glc-Trio-Core in East-Asian strains lacking the HP1283/HP1578 genes. In view of the high gastric cancer rate in East Asia, the absence of the HP1283/HP1578 genes in East-Asian H. pylori strains warrants future studies addressing the role of the lipopolysaccharide heptan in pathogenesis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31747390 PMCID: PMC6892558 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 4Bioinformatic analysis of the glycosyltransferase genes in H. pylori LPS biosynthetic pathway.
The pattern of the presence/absence of the assigned LPS glycosyltransferase genes in 65 strains with well-assembled LPS genes. Based on the polymorphism of the carboxy-terminal half of the enzyme, 5 HP1105 alleles are distinguished. The locus JHP0562-0563 contains one or two glycosyltransferase genes among the three possible ones (1 to 3) with the amino-terminal modules (n1 to n3) and the carboxy-terminal counterparts (c1 to c3). The glycosyltransferases responsible for synthesis of core-Trio-Glc and distal Lewis antigens are conserved amongst H. pylori strains; the glycosyltransferases responsible for synthesis of the intervening region between the core-Trio-Glc and the distal Lewis antigens vary substantially among H. pylori populations: both HP1283 and HP1578 are absent in all studied hspEastAsia strains exhibiting JHP0562 (n1c1) and two copies of HP1105 alleles (highlighted in green box). In contrast, strains harbouring the HP1283/HP1578 usually contain only one copy of HP1105 (mostly allele 1) and lack JHP0562 (n1c1) (highlighted in black box).
CAZy family assignment of H. pylori glycosyltransferase genes.
| NO. | GT family | 26695 ORF | G27 ORF | Activity | Function | Mutatagenesis in this study | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | GT-2 | HP0102 | HPG27_94 | Putative glycosyltransferase | Unknown | √ | this study |
| 2. | GT-8 | HP1578 | HPG27_1515 | Putative glycosyltransferase | Unknown | √ | this study |
| 3. | GT-9 | HPG27_1229 | Putative glycosyltransferase | Unknown | this study | ||
| 4. | GT-9 | HPG27_1230 | Putative glycosyltransferase | Unknown | √ | this study | |
| 5. | GT-25 | HP0805 | HPG27_761 | Putative glycosyltransferase | Unknown | √ | this study |
| 6. | GT-9 | HP1283 | HPG27_1235 | Putative heptosyltransferase | Heptan | √ | this study and [ |
| 7. | GT-19 | HP0867 | HPG27_821 | LpxB | [ | ||
| 8. | GT-30 | HP0957 | HPG27_905 | WaaA | [ | ||
| 9. | GT-9 | HP0279 | HPG27_258 | Hep I transferase | Core-oligosaccharide | √ | [ |
| 10. | GT-9 | HP1191 | HPG27_1136 | Hep II transferase | √ | [ | |
| 11. | GT-9 | HP1284 | HPG27_1236 | Hep III transferase | √ | [ | |
| 12. | GT-8 | HP1416 | HPG27_ 1339 | α-1,2/4 Glc transferase | √ | [ | |
| 13. | GT-9 | HP0479 | HPG27_437 | α-1,2-DD-Hep transferase | Trio | √ | [ |
| 14. | GT-8 | HP0159 | HPG27_146 | α-1,6 Glc transferase | Glucan | √ | [ |
| 15. | GT-8 | HP1105 | HPG27_1046 | β-1,3-GlcNAc transferase | Lewis antigen | √ | [ |
| 16. | GT-25 | HP0619 (JHP0562/3) | HPG27_579/580 | β-1,3-Gal transferase | √ | [ | |
| 17. | GT-25 | HP0826 | HPG27_785 | β-1,4-Gal transferase | √ | [ | |
| 18. | GT-10 | HP0379 | HPG27_613 | FutA | √ | [ | |
| 19. | GT-10 | HP0651 | HPG27_1018 | FutB | √ | [ | |
| 20. | GT-11 | HP0093/0094 | HPG27_86 | FutC | √ | [ | |
| 21. | GT-8 | HP0208 | HPG27_190 | Putative glycosyltransferase | LPS biosynthesis ? | √ | [ |
| 22. | GT-4 | HP0421 | HPG27_952 | Cholesterol α-glucosyltransferase | Not associated with LPS biosynthesis | [ | |
| 23. | GT-28 | HP1155 | HPG27_1099 | MurG | [ | ||
| 24. | GT-51 | HP0597 | HPG27_557 | PBP-1A | [ |
※ partial fragment or homologue not found in this strain
# HP1283 function was unknown at the time of this study but has recently been annotated [22]