| Literature DB >> 34163919 |
Liubov Yakovlieva1, Thomas M Wood2,3, Johan Kemmink1, Ioli Kotsogianni2, Franziska Koller4, Jürgen Lassak4, Nathaniel I Martin2, Marthe T C Walvoort1.
Abstract
For canonical asparagine glycosylation, the primary amino acid sequence that directs glycosylation at specific asparagine residues is well-established. Here we reveal that a recently discovered bacterial enzyme EarP, that transfers rhamnose to a specific arginine residue in its acceptor protein EF-P, specifically recognizes a β-hairpin loop. Notably, while the in vitro rhamnosyltransferase activity of EarP is abolished when presented with linear substrate peptide sequences derived from EF-P, the enzyme readily glycosylates the same sequence in a cyclized β-hairpin mimic. Additional studies with other substrate-mimicking cyclic peptides revealed that EarP activity is sensitive to the method used to induce cyclization and in some cases is tolerant to amino acid sequence variation. Using detailed NMR approaches, we established that the active peptide substrates all share some degree of β-hairpin formation, and therefore conclude that the β-hairpin epitope is the major determinant of arginine-rhamnosylation by EarP. Our findings add a novel recognition motif to the existing knowledge on substrate specificity of protein glycosylation, and are expected to guide future identifications of rhamnosylation sites in other protein substrates. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 34163919 PMCID: PMC8179230 DOI: 10.1039/d0sc05823h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1(A) Asx-turn: proposed secondary structure formed by the sequon amino acids. The amide group of Asn is forming H-bonds with the side chain hydroxyl of the +2 amino acid. (B) Deprotonation by the enzymatic base leads to the formation of the activated imidol species. (C) The twisted amide as alternative hypothesis for Asn activation. (D) β-turn secondary structure, formed by reversing the direction of the chain over four residues, stabilized by interstrand H-bonds. (H-bonds are showed as dashed lines). (E) Rhamnosylation of EF-P by EarP. Domain I of EF-P (amino acids 1–65) is shown in orange.
Fig. 2(A) EarP–EF-P complex from P. aeruginosa (generated with YASARA, PDB 6J7M). EarP is depicted in grey, domain I of EF-P is colored red, EF-P residues involved in binding with EarP are in green. (B) Cyclic peptide mimics of the EF-P β-hairpin. Arg32 is shown in pink, altered residues (with respect to 11mer_Pa) are shown in blue. (C) Zoom-in of the coupled HSQC spectrum of crude Rha-11mer_Pa reaction mixture. JCH = 168 Hz (α-glycosidic bond). (D) Experimentally determined NOE signals that are indicative of a β-hairpin structure are mapped on the 11mer l-Pro–d-Pro_Pa fragment (from 3OYY crystal structure). Hydrogen bonds inferred from the NH temperature studies are shown as red dashed lines. NOE signals are shown as double-ended arrows (magenta: medium NOE; purple: weak NOE).
Fig. 3(A) ITC studies reveal strong binding between EF-P (233 μM) and EarP (20 μM) in the presence of 60 μM TDP. (B) No apparent binding was observed between 11mer_Pa (10 mM) and EarP (20 μM) with ITC in the presence of 60 μM TDP. (C) Dot blot affinity assay of a two-fold serial dilution of 35 μM Rha-EFP (C1) and 60 μM Rha-11mer_Pa (C2) binding to the anti-ArgRha antibody, and visualized using anti-rabbit Alexa488 secondary antibody. Non-rhamnosylated substrates are not recognized by the anti-ArgRha antibody (C3 and C4).