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1.
2.
The capsular polysaccharide of Escherichia coli K92 contains alternating -8-NeuAcalpha2- and -9-NeuAcalpha2- linkages. The enzyme catalyzing this polymerizing reaction has been cloned from the genomic DNA of E. coli K92. The 1.2-kilobase polymerase chain reaction fragment was subcloned in pRSET vector and the protein was expressed in the BL21(DE3) strain of E. coli with a hexameric histidine at its N-terminal end. The enzyme was isolated in the supernatant after lysis of the cells and fractionated by ultracentrifugation. Western blotting using anti-histidine antibody showed the presence of a band that migrated at about 47.5 kDa on both reducing and nonreducing SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating a monomeric enzyme. Among the carbohydrate acceptors tested, N-acetylneuraminic acid and the gangliosides G(D3) and G(Q1b) were preferred substrates. The cell-free enzyme reaction products obtained were characterized by NMR and mass spectrometry, which indicated the presence of both alpha2,9- and alpha2,8-linked polysialyl structure. The K92 neuS gene was used to transform the K1 strain of E. coli, the capsule of which contains only -8-NeuAcalpha2- linkages. Analysis of the polysaccharides isolated from these transformed cells is consistent with the presence of both -8-NeuAcalpha2- and -9-NeuAcalpha2- linkages. Our results suggest that the neuS gene product of E. coli K92 catalyzes the synthesis of polysialic acid with alpha2,9- and alpha2,8-linkages in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Polysialic acid (PSA) capsules are cell-associated homopolymers of alpha2,8-, alpha2,9-, or alternating alpha2,8/2,9-linked sialic acid residues that function as essential virulence factors in neuroinvasive diseases caused by certain strains of Escherichia coli and Neisseria meningitidis. PSA chains structurally identical to the bacterial alpha2,8-linked capsular polysaccharides are also synthesized by the mammalian central nervous system, where they regulate neuronal function in association with the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM). Despite the structural identity between bacterial and NCAM PSAs, the respective polysialyltransferases (polySTs) responsible for polymerizing sialyl residues from donor CMP-sialic acid are not homologous glycosyltransferases. To better define the mechanism of capsule biosynthesis, we established the functional interchangeability of bacterial polySTs by complementation of a polymerase-deficient E. coli K1 mutant with the polyST genes from groups B or C N. meningitidis and the control E. coli K92 polymerase gene. The biochemical and immunochemical results demonstrated that linkage specificity is dictated solely by the source of the polymerase structural gene. To determine the molecular basis for linkage specificity, we created chimeras of the K1 and K92 polySTs by overlap extension PCR. Exchanging the first 52 N-terminal amino acids of the K1 NeuS with the C terminus of the K92 homologue did not alter specificity of the resulting chimera, whereas exchanging the first 85 or reciprocally exchanging the first 100 residues did. These results demonstrated that linkage specificity is dependent on residues located between positions 53 and 85 from the N terminus. Site-directed mutagenesis of the K92 polyST N terminus indicated that no single residue alteration was sufficient to affect specificity, consistent with the proposed function of this domain in orienting the acceptor. The combined results provide the first evidence for residues critical to acceptor binding and elongation in polysialyltransferase.  相似文献   

4.
We have chosen E. coli K92, which produces the alternating structure alpha(2-8)neuNAc alpha(2-9)neuNAc as a model system for studying bacterial polysaccharide biosynthesis. We have shown that the polysialyltransferase encoded by the K92 neuS gene can synthesize both alpha(2-8) and alpha(2-9) neuNAc linkages in vivo by 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of polysaccharide isolated from a heterologous strain containing the K92 neuS gene. The K92 polysialyltransferase is associated with the membrane in lysates of cells harboring the neuS gene in expression vectors. Although the enzyme can transfer sialic acid to the nonreducing end of oligosaccharides with either linkage, it is unable to initiate chain synthesis without exogenously added polysialic acid. Thus, the polysialyltransferase encoded by neuS is not sufficient for de novo synthesis of polysaccharide but requires another membrane component for initiation. The acceptor specificity of this polysialyltransferase was studied using sialic acid oligosaccharides of various structures as exogenous acceptors. The enzyme can transfer to the nonreducing end of all bacteria polysialic acids, but has a definite preference for alpha(2-8) acceptors. Gangliosides containing neuNAc alpha(2-8)neuNAc are elongated, whereas monsialylated gangliosides are not. Disialylgangliosides are better acceptors than short oligosaccharides, suggesting a lipid-linked oligosaccharide may be preferred in the elongation reaction. These studies show that the K92 polysialyltransferase catalyzes an elongation reaction that involves transfer of sialic acid from CMP-sialic acid to the nonreducing end of two different acceptor substrates.  相似文献   

5.
Vionnet J  Vann WF 《Glycobiology》2007,17(7):735-743
Escherichia coli K92 produces a capsular polysialic acid with alternating alpha2,8 alpha2,9 NeuNAc linkages. This polysaccharide is cross-reactive with the neuroinvasive pathogen Neisseria meningitidis Group C. The K92 polysialyltransferase (PST) catalyzes the synthesis of the polysialic acid with alternating linkages by the transfer of NeuNAc from CMP-NeuNAc to the nonreducing end of the growing polymer. We used a fluorescent-based high-performance liquid chromatography assay to characterize the process of chain extension. The PST elongates the acceptor GT3-FCHASE in a biphasic fashion. The initial phase polymers are characterized by accumulation of product containing 1-8 additional sialic acid residues. This phase is followed by a very rapid formation of high-molecular weight (MW) polymer as the accumulated oligosaccharides containing 8-10 sialic acids are consumed. The high-MW polymer contains 90-100 sialic acids and is sensitive to degradation by periodate and K1-5 endoneuraminidase, suggesting that the polymer contains the alternating structure. The polymerization reaction does not appear to be strictly processive, since oligosaccharides of each intermediate size were detected before accumulation of high-molecular weight polymer. Synthesis can be blocked by CMP-9-azido-NeuNAc. These results suggest that the K92 PST forms both alpha2,8 and alpha2,9 linkages in a successive and nonprocessive fashion.  相似文献   

6.
Vionnet J  Kempner ES  Vann WF 《Biochemistry》2006,45(45):13511-13516
The polysialyltransferase of Escherichia coli K92 catalyzes the transfer of sialic acid from CMP-sialic acid to a growing chain of polysialic acid at the nonreducing end. The enzyme encoded by the neuS gene is membrane-associated and has been suggested to be organized within a complex of several proteins encoded by the K92 gene cluster. Attempts to prepare a soluble active NeuS enzyme have been unsuccessful. Recent results suggest that de novo synthesis of polysialic acid requires coexpression of four genes from the cluster: neuS, neuE, kpsC, and kpsS. However, elongation of preexisting polysialic acid chains only requires expression of neuS. The molecular organization of the catalytic unit of bacterial polysialyltransferases has not been described. We used radiation inactivation to measure the size of the minimum functional unit catalyzing the polysialyltransferase chain extension and de novo reactions. Membranes harboring NeuS in the presence and absence of other products of the K92 gene cluster were exposed to high-energy electrons. The rate of loss of polysialyltransferase activity reveals the mass of the molecules essential for catalytic activity. We observed that the transfer of neuNAc from CMP-neuNAc to a polysialic acid acceptor is catalyzed by a complex with a target size larger than that of monomeric NeuS. The target size of the unit catalyzing the extension of existing polysialic acid chains does not differ significantly from the size of the unit catalyzing transfer of sialic acid to the endogenous acceptor. Parallel samples of membranes containing NeuS and a green fluorescent protein (GFP) chimera were compared by target analysis. The target size of this structural unit was estimated by analysis of the rate of decay of the GFP-NeuS chimera band migrating in the immunoblots. The target size of the structural unit is larger than expected for a monomer. The results of these experiments show that while the target size of the catalytic activity for K92 polysialyltransferase is larger than a monomer of NeuS, a large complex is not required for catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The soluble form of a bacteriophage-induced endo-N-acetylneuraminidase (Endo-N) specific for hydrolyzing oligo- or poly-alpha-2,8-linked sialosyl units in sources as disparate as bacterial and neural membrane glycoconjugates was purified approximately 10,000-fold and characterized. The enzyme appears homogenous by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and has a subunit Mr 105,000. This corresponds to one of the higher Mr phage proteins which comprises 7.5% (by weight) of the total phage protein. The holoenzyme is active at neutral pH and has a Mr by gel filtration of 328,000, suggesting that the active enzyme is a trimer. Endo-N requires a minimum of 5 sialyl residues (DP5, where DP represents degree of polymerization) for activity. The limit digest products from the alpha-2,8-linked polysialic acid capsule of Escherichia coli K1 are DP4 with some DP3 and DP1,2. DP2-4 do not appear to inhibit depolymerization of polysialic acid. Endo-N digestion of the polysialosyl moiety on neural cell adhesion molecules yields sialyl oligomers with DP3 and DP4. The presence of a terminal sialitol changes both the distribution of limit digestion products and the apparent minimum substrate size. Higher Mr alpha-2,8-linked sialyl polymers (approximately DP200) are better substrates (Km 50-70 microM) than sialyl oligomers of approximately DP10-20 (Km 1.2 mM). Endo-N activity is inhibited by DNA and several other poly-anions tested. An examination of the distribution of intermediate products shows that Endo-N binds and cleaves at random sites on the polysialosyl chains, in contrast to initiating cleavage at one end and depolymerizing processively. Endo-N can serve as a specific molecular probe to detect and selectively modify poly-alpha-2,8-sialosyl carbohydrate units which have been implicated in bacterial meningitis and neural cell adhesion.  相似文献   

9.
E R Vimr 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(19):6191-6197
The enzymes required for polysialic acid capsule synthesis in Escherichia coli K1 are encoded by region 2 neu genes of the multigenic kps cluster. To facilitate analysis of capsule synthesis and translocation, an E. coli K1 strain with mutations in nanA and neuB, affecting sialic acid degradation and synthesis, respectively, was constructed by transduction. The acapsular phenotype of the mutant was corrected in vivo by exogenous addition of sialic acid. By blocking sialic acid degradation, the nanA mutation allows intracellular metabolite accumulation, while the neuB mutation prevents dilution by the endogenous sialic acid pool and allows capsule synthesis to be controlled experimentally by the exogenous addition of sialic acid to the growth medium. Complementation was detected by bacteriophage K1F adsorption or infectivity assays. Polysialic acid translocation was observed within 2 min after addition of sialic acid to the growth medium, demonstrating the rapidity in vivo of sialic acid transport, activation, and polymerization and translocation of polysaccharide to the cell surface. Phage adsorption was not inhibited by chloramphenicol, demonstrating that de novo protein synthesis was not required for polysialic acid synthesis or translocation at 37 degrees C. Exogenous radiolabeled sialic acid was incorporated exclusively into capsular polysaccharide. The polymeric nature of the labeled capsular material was confirmed by gel permeation chromatography and susceptibility of sialyl polymers to K1F endo-N-acylneuraminidase. The ability to experimentally manipulate capsule expression provides new approaches for investigating polysialic acid synthesis and membrane translocation mechanisms.  相似文献   

10.
Poly-alpha-2,8 N-acetylneuraminic acid (polySia) is an important virulence factor in infections caused by Escherichia coli K1 and Neisseria meningitidis B. In E. coli K1 a membranous CMP-NeuAc: poly-alpha-2,8 sialosyl sialyltransferase (polysialyltransferase) complex catalyses the synthesis of linear polySia chains. The complex also elongates sialyl oligomers that serve as exogenous acceptors. The gene encoding a polysialyltransferase of E. coli has been identified by subcloning and DNA sequence analysis. The subcloned DNA fragment codes for a polypeptide with a molecular mass of 47 kDa catalysing the in vitro synthesis of polySia by elongation of exogenous acceptors.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli K1 is a leading pathogen in neonatal sepsis and meningitis. The K1 capsule, composed of alpha2,8-linked polysialic acid, represents the major virulence factor. In some K1 strains, phase-variable O-acetylation of the capsular polysaccharide is observed, a modification that is catalyzed by the prophage-encoded O-acetyltransferase NeuO. Phase variation is mediated by changes in the number of heptanucleotide repeats within the 5'-coding region of neuO, and full-length translation is restricted to repeat numbers that are a multiple of three. To understand the biochemical basis of K1 capsule O-acetylation, NeuO encoded by alleles containing 0, 12, 24, and 36 repeats was expressed and purified to homogeneity via a C-terminal hexahistidine tag. All NeuO variants assembled into hexamers and were enzymatically active with a high substrate specificity toward polysialic acid with >14 residues. Remarkably, the catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)(donor)) increased linearly with increasing numbers of repeats, revealing a new mechanism for modulating NeuO activity. Using homology modeling, we predicted a three-dimensional structure primarily composed of a left-handed parallel beta-helix with one protruding loop. Two amino acids critical for catalytic activity were identified and corresponding alanine substitutions, H119A and W143A, resulted in a complete loss of activity without affecting the oligomerization state. Our results indicate that in NeuO typical features of an acetyltransferase of the left-handed beta-helix family are combined with a unique regulatory mechanism based on variable N-terminal protein extensions formed by tandem copies of an RLKTQDS heptad.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian brains contain relatively high amounts of common and uncommon sialylated N-glycan structures. Sialic acid linkages were identified for voltage-gated potassium channels, Kv3.1, 3.3, 3.4, 1.1, 1.2 and 1.4, by evaluating their electrophoretic migration patterns in adult rat brain membranes digested with various glycosidases. Additionally, their electrophoretic migration patterns were compared with those of NCAM (neural cell adhesion molecule), transferrin and the Kv3.1 protein heterologously expressed in B35 neuroblastoma cells. Metabolic labelling of the carbohydrates combined with glycosidase digestion reactions were utilized to show that the N-glycan of recombinant Kv3.1 protein was capped with an oligo/poly-sialyl unit. All three brain Kv3 glycoproteins, like NCAM, were terminated with alpha2,3-linked sialyl residues, as well as atypical alpha2,8-linked sialyl residues. Additionally, at least one of their antennae was terminated with an oligo/poly-sialyl unit, similar to recombinant Kv3.1 and NCAM. In contrast, brain Kv1 glycoproteins consisted of sialyl residues with alpha2,8-linkage, as well as sialyl residues linked to internal carbohydrate residues of the carbohydrate chains of the N-glycans. This type of linkage was also supported for Kv3 glycoproteins. To date, such a sialyl linkage has only been identified in gangliosides, not N-linked glycoproteins. We conclude that all six Kv channels (voltage-gated K+ channels) contribute to the alpha2,8-linked sialylated N-glycan pool in mammalian brain and furthermore that their N-glycan structures contain branched sialyl residues. Identification of these novel and unique sialylated N-glycan structures implicate a connection between potassium channel activity and atypical sialylated N-glycans in modulating and fine-tuning the excitable properties of neurons in the nervous system.  相似文献   

13.
Capsular polysialyl chains of wild-typeEscherichia coli K1 consist of about 200 sialyl units. Factors associated with the degree of polymerization of the K1 polysaccharide were studied by isolation of mutant bacteria resistant to K1 phage. The mutants (n=55) were characterized with respect to the length of their capsular sialyl chains by gel electrophoresis and reactivity with anti-K1 antibodies. No mutants with short sialyl chains were found, although the mutants displayed different phenotypic properties and produced different amounts of sialic acid. Ultrastructural examination revealed phenotypes with accumulations of apparent polysialic acid in the periplasm or cytosol. This observation provides direct support for the previously proposed translocation of the K1 polysaccharide via the periplasmic space during its biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Escherichia coli K1 is responsible for 80% of E. coli neonatal meningitis and is a common pathogen in urinary tract infections. Bacteria of this serotype are encapsulated with the alpha(2-8)-polysialic acid NeuNAc(alpha2-8), common to several bacterial pathogens. The gene cluster encoding the pathway for synthesis of this polymer is organized into three regions: (i) kpsSCUDEF, (ii) neuDBACES, and (iii) kpsMT. The K1 polysialyltransferase, NeuS, cannot synthesize polysialic acid de novo without other products of the gene cluster. Membranes isolated from strains having the entire K1 gene cluster can synthesize polysialic acid de novo. We designed a series of plasmid constructs containing fragments of regions 1 and 2 in two compatible vectors to determine the minimum number of gene products required for de novo synthesis of the polysialic acid from CMP-NeuNAc in K1 E. coli. We measured the ability of the various combinations of region 1 and 2 fragments to restore polysialyltransferase activity in vitro in the absence of exogenously added polysaccharide acceptor. The products of region 2 genes neuDBACES alone were not sufficient to support de novo synthesis of polysialic acid in vitro. Only membrane fractions harboring NeuES and KpsCS could form sialic polymer in the absence of exogenous acceptor at the concentrations formed by wild-type E. coli K1 membranes. Membrane fractions harboring NeuES and KpsC together could form small quantities of the sialic polymer de novo.  相似文献   

15.
The study of new biomaterials is the objective of many current research projects in biotechnological medicine. A promising scaffold material for the application in tissue engineering or other biomedical applications is polysialic acid (polySia), a homopolymer of alpha2,8-linked sialic acid residues, which represents a posttranslational modification of the neural cell adhesion molecule and occurs in all vertebrate species. Some neuroinvasive bacteria like, e.g. Escherichia coli K1 (E. coli K1) use polySia as capsular polysaccharide. In this latter case long polySia chains with a degree of polymerization of >200 are linked to lipid anchors. Since in vertebrates no polySia degrading enzymes exist, the molecule has a long half-life in the organism, but degradation can be induced by the use of endosialidases, bacteriophage-derived enzymes with pronounced specificity for polySia. In this work a biotechnological process for the production of bacterial polysialic acid is presented. The process includes the development of a multiple fed-batch cultivation of the E. coli K1 strain and a complete downstream strategy of polySia. A controlled feed of substrate at low concentrations resulted in an increase of the carbon yield (C(product)/C(substrate)) from 2.2 to 6.6%. The downstream process was optimized towards purification of long polySia chains. Using a series of adjusted precipitation steps an almost complete depletion of contaminating proteins was achieved. The whole process yielded 1-2g polySia from a 10-l bacterial culture with a purity of 95-99%. Further product analysis demonstrated maximum chain length of >130 for the final product.  相似文献   

16.
The capsular polysaccharide of Escherichia coli K1 is a linear polymer of N-acetylneuraminic acid in alpha-2,8 linkage. Certain substrains of E. coli K1 (designated OAc+) modify the polysaccharide by O-acetylation of the sialic acids. We demonstrate here an acetyl-coenzyme A: polysialosyl O-acetyltransferase activity that is found only in E. coli K1 OAc+ substrains. When form variation between the O-acetyl-positive and -negative states occurred in strain D698:K1, the fluctuations were accompanied by appropriate changes in the expression of enzyme activity. Thus, expression of this enzyme can account for the OAc+ phenotype and for the form variation between OAc+ and OAc-. The enzyme was solubilized in nonionic detergent and freed of endogenous acceptor activity by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and its general properties were determined. Analysis of the reaction product showed a highly preferential acetylation reaction that was confined to polysialosyl units of greater than 14 residues. Acetyl groups were shown to be transferred to both the 7- and the 9-positions of the sialic acid residues. The partially purified enzyme was stable even after prolonged incubation at 57 degrees C. In contrast, any further purification resulted in loss of activity, even at 4 degrees C. Treatment of the stable enzyme with a polysialic acid-specific endoneuraminidase caused a similar loss of enzyme stability. This effect of the endoneuraminidase could be protected against by the addition of exogenous polysialic acid. This indicates that the partially purified enzyme contains traces of endogenous polysialic acid substrate that are required for the stability of the enzyme. Finally, the enzyme can O-acetylate the polysialic acid chains on the eucaryotic protein neural cell adhesion molecule, suggesting that enzymatic recognition of the substrate requires only the polysialic acid sequence.  相似文献   

17.
Polysialic acid-containing glycoproteins consisting of extended chains of at least 55 sialyl residues (DP55, where DP represents degree of polymerization) are expressed on human neuroblastoma cells, CHP-134. The strategy used for detecting these unique carbohydrate structures was based on the use of two highly specific prokaryotic-derived enzyme systems and an anti-polysialosyl antibody (H.46). These probes were developed for the detection of polysialic acid on neural cell adhesion molecules (Troy, F. A., Hallenbeck, P. C., McCoy, R. D., and Vimr, E. R. (1987) Methods Enzymol. 138, 169-185). Proof for the presence of long chain multimers of sialic acid was based on two types of experiments which utilized: 1) a glycopeptide fraction of CHP-134 cells, labeled metabolically with D-[3H]GlcN and 2) a membrane fraction from CHP-134 cells which served as an exogenous acceptor of [14C] NeuNAc residues in an Escherichia coli K1 sialyltransferase assay. In vitro, this enzyme CMP-NeuNAc:poly-alpha-2,8-sialosyl sialyltransferase catalyzes the transfer of [14C]NeuNAc from CMP-[14C]NeuNAc to exogenous acceptors containing at least 3 sialyl residues. In the first series of experiments, endo-N-acetylneuraminidase (Endo-N), a bacteriophage-derived enzyme specific for hydrolyzing poly-alpha-2,8-sialosyl chains containing a minimum of 5 sialyl residues was used. Limit Endo-N digestion of the 3H-glycopeptides from the [3H] GlcN-labeled cells released short [3H]sialyl oligomers [( 3H]DP1-6) which were degraded to [3H]NeuNAc by exosialidase. Partial Endo-N digestion released a series of [3H]sialyl oligomers extending up to DP55. The longer (DP20-55) and intermediate sized (DP10-20) oligomers were isolated and converted to short oligomers ((3H]DP1-6) by retreating with Endo-N, thus confirming their identity as homo-oligomers of alpha-2,8-linked [3H]NeuNAc residues. In the second series of experiments, a membrane fraction of CHP-134 cells was radiolabeled in vitro with [14C]NeuNAc by E. coli K1 sialyltransferase. The membrane fraction had a major portion of radioactivity that was high Mr and polydisperse (Mr 100,000-250,000) as demonstrated in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Using Western blotting, pre-existing material of similar size was shown to react with antibody H.46.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Plaque morphology indicated that the five Escherichia coli K1-specific bacteriophages (A to E) described by Gross et al. (R. J. Gross, T. Cheasty, and B. Rowe, J. Clin. Microbiol. 6:548-550, 1977) encode K1 depolymerase activity that is present in both the bound and free forms. The free form of the enzyme from bacteriophage E was purified 238-fold to apparent homogeneity and in a high yield from ammonium sulfate precipitates of cell lysates by a combination of CsCl density gradient ultracentrifugation, gel filtration, and anion-exchange chromatography. The enzyme complex had an apparent molecular weight of 208,000, as judged from its behavior on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and was dissociated by sodium dodecyl sulfate at 100 degrees C to yield two polypeptides with apparent molecular weights of 74,000 and 38,500. Optimum hydrolytic activity was observed at pH 5.5, and activity was strongly inhibited by Ca2+; the Km was 7.41 X 10(-3) M. Rapid hydrolysis of both the O-acetylated and non-O-acetylated forms of the K1 antigen, an alpha 2----8-linked homopolymer of N-acetylneuraminic acid, and of the meningococcus B antigen was observed. Limited hydrolysis of the E. coli K92 antigen, an N-acetylneuraminic acid homopolymer containing alternating alpha 2----8 and alpha 2----9 linkages, occurred, but the enzyme failed to release alpha 2----3-, alpha 2----6-, or alpha 2----9-linked sialic residues from a variety of other substrates.  相似文献   

19.
O acetylation at carbon positions 7 or 9 of the sialic acid residues in the polysialic acid capsule of Escherichia coli K1 is catalyzed by a phase-variable contingency locus, neuO, carried by the K1-specific prophage, CUS-3. Here we describe a novel method for analyzing polymeric sialic acid O acetylation that involves the release of surface sialic acids by endo-N-acetylneuraminidase digestion, followed by fluorescent labeling and detection of quinoxalinone derivatives by chromatography. The results indicated that NeuO is responsible for the majority of capsule modification that takes place in vivo. However, a minor neuO-independent O acetylation pathway was detected that is dependent on the bifunctional polypeptide encoded by neuD. This pathway involves O acetylation of monomeric sialic acid and is regulated by another bifunctional enzyme, NeuA, which includes N-terminal synthetase and C-terminal sialyl O-esterase domains. A homologue of the NeuA C-terminal domain (Pm1710) in Pasteurella multocida was also shown to be an esterase, suggesting that it functions in the catabolism of acetylated environmental sialic acids. Our combined results indicate a previously unexpected complexity in the synthesis and catabolism of microbial sialic and polysialic acids. These findings are key to understanding the biological functions of modified sialic acids in E. coli K1 and other species and may provide new targets for drug or vaccine development.  相似文献   

20.
Escherichia coli Bos-12 synthesizes a heteropolymer of sialic acids with alternating alpha-2,9/alpha-2,8 glycosidic linkages (1). In this study, we have shown that the polysialyltransferase of the E. coli Bos-12 recognizes an alpha-2,8 glycosidic linkage of sialic acid at the nonreducing end of an exogenous acceptor of either the alpha-2,8 homopolymer of sialic acid or the alternating alpha-2,9/alpha-2,8 heteropolymer of sialic acid and catalyzes the transfer of Neu5Ac from CMP-Neu5Ac to this residue. When the exogenous acceptor is an alpha-2,8-linked oligomer of sialic acid, the main product synthesized is derived from the addition of a single residue of [14C]Neu5Ac to form either an alpha-2,8 glycosidic linkage or an alpha-2,9 glycosidic linkage at the nonreducing end, at an alpha-2, 8/alpha-2,9 ratio of approximately 2:1. When the acceptor is the alternating alpha-2,9/alpha-2,8 heteropolymer of sialic acid, chain elongation takes place four to five times more efficiently than the alpha-2,8-linked homopolymer of sialic acid as an acceptor. It was found that the alpha-2,9-linked homopolymer of sialic acid and the alpha-2,8/alpha-2,9-linked hetero-oligomer of sialic acid with alpha-2,9 at the nonreducing end not only failed to serve as an acceptor for the E. coli Bos-12 polysialyltransferase for the transfer of [14C]Neu5Ac, but they inhibited the de novo synthesis of polysialic acid catalyzed by this enzyme. The results obtained in this study favor the proposal that the biosynthesis of the alpha-2, 9/alpha-2,8 heteropolymer of sialic acid catalyzed by the E. coli Bos-12 polysialyltransferase involves a successive transfer of a preformed alpha-2,8-linked dimer of sialic acid at the nonreducing terminus of the acceptor to form an alpha-2,9 glycosidic linkage between the incoming dimer and the acceptor. The glycosidic linkage at the nonreducing end of the alternating alpha-2,9/alpha-2,8 heteropolymer of sialic acid produced by E. coli Bos-12 should be an alpha-2,8 glycosidic bond and not an alpha-2,9 glycosidic linkage.  相似文献   

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