4.6 Article

Sequence variation in the β7-β8 loop of bacterial class A sortase enzymes alters substrate selectivity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100981

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Funding

  1. NSF [CHE-1904711]
  2. Cottrell Scholar Award from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement
  3. NIAID, National Institutes of Health [F32AI145111]
  4. Elwha Undergraduate Summer Research Award
  5. Joseph and Karen Morse Student Research in Chemistry Fellowship

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Sortase enzymes play a critical role in transpeptidation reactions in Gram-positive bacteria. The specificity of these enzymes, particularly saSrtA, has traditionally limited their applications. By investigating a conserved loop in sortases and designing chimeric enzymes, it was possible to expand the substrate selectivity and potentially broaden the applications of sortase-mediated ligation reactions.
Gram-positive bacteria contain sortase enzymes on their cell surfaces that catalyze transpeptidation reactions critical for proper cellular function. In vitro, sortases are used in sortase-mediated ligation (SML) reactions for a variety of protein engineering applications. Historically, sortase A from Staphylococcus aureus (saSrtA) has been the enzyme of choice to catalyze SML reactions. However, the stringent specificity of saSrtA for the LPXTG sequence motif limits its uses. Here, we describe the impact on substrate selectivity of a structur-ally conserved loop with a high degree of sequence variability in all classes of sortases. We investigate the contribution of this beta 7-beta 8 loop by designing and testing chimeric sortase enzymes. Our chimeras utilize natural sequence variation of class A sortases from eight species engineered into the SrtA sequence from Streptococcus pneumoniae. While some of these chimeric enzymes mimic the activity and selectivity of the WT protein from which the loop sequence was derived (e.g., that of saSrtA), others results in chimeric Streptococcus pneumoniae SrtA enzymes that are able to accommodate a range of residues in the final position of the substrate motif (LPXTX). Using mutagenesis, structural comparisons, and sequence analyses, we identify three interactions facilitated by beta 7-beta 8 loop residues that appear to be broadly conserved or converged upon in class A sortase enzymes. These studies provide the foundation for a deeper understanding of sortase target selectivity and can expand the sortase toolbox for future SML applications.

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