4.4 Article

AglJ Adds the First Sugar of the N-Linked Pentasaccharide Decorating the Haloferax volcanii S-Layer Glycoprotein

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 192, Issue 21, Pages 5572-5579

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00705-10

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Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [30/07]
  2. U.S. Army Research Office [W911NF-07-1-0260]
  3. NIH [GM-069338]
  4. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BBF0083091, BBC5196701]
  5. Negev-Zin Associates scholarship
  6. Dstl

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Like the Eukarya and Bacteria, the Archaea also perform N glycosylation. Using the haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii as a model system, a series of Agl proteins involved in the archaeal version of this posttranslational modification has been identified. In the present study, the participation of HVO_1517 in N glycosylation was considered, given its homology to a known component of the eukaryal N-glycosylation pathway and because of the genomic proximity of HVO_1517 to agl genes encoding known elements of the H. volcanii N-glycosylation process. By combining the deletion of HVO_1517 with mass spectrometric analysis of both dolichol phosphate monosaccharide-charged carriers and the S-layer glycoprotein, evidence was obtained showing the participation of HVO_1517, renamed AglJ, in adding the first hexose of the N-linked pentasaccharide decorating this reporter glycoprotein. The deletion of aglJ, however, did not fully prevent the attachment of a hexose residue to the S-layer glycoprotein. Moreover, in the absence of AglJ, the level of only one of the three monosaccharide-charged dolichol phosphate carriers detected in the cell was reduced. Nonetheless, in cells lacking AglJ, no further sugar subunits were added to the remaining monosaccharide-charged dolichol phosphate carriers or to the monosaccharide-modified S-layer glycoprotein, pointing to the importance of the sugar added through the actions of AglJ for proper N glycosylation. Finally, while aglJ can be deleted, H. volcanii surface layer integrity is compromised in the absence of the encoded protein.

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