4.6 Article

Enzymatic comparison of two homologous enzymes reveals N-terminal domain of chondroitinase ABC I regulates substrate selection and product generation

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JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 299, Issue 5, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2023.104692

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Two new chondroitinase ABC I enzymes were identified from the intestinal metagenome of CS-fed mice. They have different enzymatic properties and the N-terminal domain plays a critical role in regulating substrate binding and degradation.
Chondroitinase ABC-type I (CSase ABC I), which can digest both chondroitin sulfate (CS) and dermatan sulfate (DS) in an endolytic manner, is an essential tool in structural and func-tional studies of CS/DS. Although a few CSase ABC I have been identified from bacteria, the substrate-degrading pattern and regulatory mechanisms of them have rarely been investigated. Herein, two CSase ABC I, IM3796 and IM1634, were identified from the intestinal metagenome of CS-fed mice. They show high sequence homology (query coverage: 88.00%, percent identity: 90.10%) except for an extra peptide (Met1-His109) at the N-terminus in IM1634, but their enzymatic properties are very different. IM3796 prefers to degrade 6 -O-sulfated GalNAc residue-enriched CS into tetra-and disaccharides. In contrast, IM1634 exhibits nearly a thousand times more activity than IM3796 and can completely digest CS/DS with various sulfa-tion patterns to produce disaccharides, unlike most CSase ABC I. Structure modeling showed that IM3796 did not contain an N-terminal domain composed of two beta-sheets, which is found in IM1634 and other CSase ABC I. Furthermore, deletion of the N-terminal domain (Met1-His109) from IM1634 caused the enzymatic properties of the variant IM1634-T109 to be similar to those of IM3796, and conversely, grafting this domain to IM3796 increased the similarity of the variant IM3796-A109 to IM1634. In conclusion, the comparative study of the new CSase ABC I provides two unique tools for CS/DS-related studies and applications and, more importantly, reveals the critical role of the N-terminal domain in regulating the substrate binding and degradation of these enzymes.

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