4.6 Article

Biochemical Characterization of Bifunctional 3-Deoxy--d-manno-oct-2-ulosonic Acid (-Kdo) Transferase KpsC from Escherichia coli Involved in Capsule Biosynthesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 291, Issue 41, Pages 21519-21530

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.751115

Keywords

cell surface; Escherichia coli (E; coli); glycoconjugate; glycolipid structure; glycosyltransferase; gram-negative bacteria; oligosaccharide; Kdo; capsular polysaccharide

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Discovery Grants from the National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. Canadian Glycomics Network (GlycoNEt, National Centres of Excellence Program)

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3-Deoxy-d-manno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo) is an essential component of bacterial lipopolysaccharides, where it provides the linkage between lipid and carbohydrate moieties. In all known LPS structures, Kdo residues possess -anomeric configurations, and the corresponding inverting -Kdo transferases are well characterized. Recently, it has been shown that a large group of capsular polysaccharides from Gram-negative bacteria, produced by ATP-binding cassette transporter-dependent pathways, are also attached to a lipid anchor through a conserved Kdo oligosaccharide. In the study reported here, the structure of this Kdo linker was determined by NMR spectroscopy, revealing alternating -(24)- and -(27)-linked Kdo residues. KpsC contains two retaining -Kdo glycosyltransferase domains belonging to family GT99 that are responsible for polymerizing the -Kdo linker on its glycolipid acceptor. Full-length Escherichia coli KpsC was expressed and purified, together with the isolated N-terminal domain and a mutant protein (KpsC D160A) containing a catalytically inactivated N-terminal domain. The Kdo transferase activities of these proteins were determined in vitro using synthetic acceptors, and the reaction products were characterized using TLC, mass spectrometry, and NMR spectroscopy. The N- and C-terminal domains were found to catalyze formation of -(24) and -(27) linkages, respectively. Based on phylogenetic analyses, we propose the linkage specificities of the glycosyltransferase domains are conserved in KpsC homologs from other bacterial species.

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