Serena Monaco, Louise E Tailford, Andrew Bell, Matthew Wallace, Nathalie Juge, Jesús Angulo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
RgNanH is an intramolecular trans-sialidase expressed by the human gut symbiont Ruminococcus gnavus, to utilise intestinal sialylated mucin glycan epitopes. Its catalytic domain, belonging to glycoside hydrolase GH33 family, cleaves off terminal sialic acid residues from mucins, releasing 2,7-anhydro-Neu5Ac which is then used as metabolic substrate by R. gnavus to proliferate in the mucosal environment. RgNanH is one of the three intramolecular trans-sialidases (IT-sialidases) characterised to date, and the first from a gut commensal organism. Here, saturation transfer difference NMR (STD NMR) in combination with computational techniques (molecular docking and CORCEMA-ST) were used to elucidate the specificity, kinetics and relative affinity of RgNanH for sialoglycans and 2,7-anhydro-Neu5Ac. We propose the first 3D model for the Michaelis complex of an IT-sialidase. This confirms the sialic acid to be the main recognition element for the interaction in the enzymatic cleft and highlights the crucial role of Trp698 to make CH-π stacking with the galactose residue of the substrate 3'-sialyllactose. The same contact is shown not to be possible for 6'-sialyllactose, due to geometrical constrains of the α-2,6 linkage. Indeed 6'-sialyllactose is not a substrate, even though it is shown to bind to RgNanH by STD NMR. These findings corroborate the role of Trp698 for the α-2,3 specificity of IT-sialidases. In this structural study, the use of Differential Epitope Mapping STD NMR (DEEP-STD NMR) approach allowed the validation of the proposed 3D models in solution. These structural approaches are shown to be instrumental in shedding light on the molecular mechanisms underpinning enzymatic reactions in the absence of enzyme-substrate X-ray structures.
期刊介绍:
Bioorganic Chemistry publishes research that addresses biological questions at the molecular level, using organic chemistry and principles of physical organic chemistry. The scope of the journal covers a range of topics at the organic chemistry-biology interface, including: enzyme catalysis, biotransformation and enzyme inhibition; nucleic acids chemistry; medicinal chemistry; natural product chemistry, natural product synthesis and natural product biosynthesis; antimicrobial agents; lipid and peptide chemistry; biophysical chemistry; biological probes; bio-orthogonal chemistry and biomimetic chemistry.
For manuscripts dealing with synthetic bioactive compounds, the Journal requires that the molecular target of the compounds described must be known, and must be demonstrated experimentally in the manuscript. For studies involving natural products, if the molecular target is unknown, some data beyond simple cell-based toxicity studies to provide insight into the mechanism of action is required. Studies supported by molecular docking are welcome, but must be supported by experimental data. The Journal does not consider manuscripts that are purely theoretical or computational in nature.
The Journal publishes regular articles, short communications and reviews. Reviews are normally invited by Editors or Editorial Board members. Authors of unsolicited reviews should first contact an Editor or Editorial Board member to determine whether the proposed article is within the scope of the Journal.