Human N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II substrate recognition uses a modular architecture that includes a convergent exosite

Asn-linked oligosaccharides are extensively modified during transit through the secretory pathway, first by trimming of the nascent glycan chains and subsequently by initiating and extending multiple oligosaccharide branches from the trimannosyl glycan core. Trimming and branching pathway steps are...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 115; no. 18; pp. 4637 - 4642
Main Authors Kadirvelraj, Renuka, Yang, Jeong-Yeh, Sanders, Justin H., Liu, Lin, Ramiah, Annapoorani, Prabhakar, Pradeep Kumar, Boons, Geert-Jan, Wood, Zachary A., Moremen, Kelley W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 01.05.2018
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Summary:Asn-linked oligosaccharides are extensively modified during transit through the secretory pathway, first by trimming of the nascent glycan chains and subsequently by initiating and extending multiple oligosaccharide branches from the trimannosyl glycan core. Trimming and branching pathway steps are highly ordered and hierarchal based on the precise substrate specificities of the individual biosynthetic enzymes. A key committed step in the synthesis of complex-type glycans is catalyzed by N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II (MGAT2), an enzyme that generates the second GlcNAcβ1,2- branch from the trimannosyl glycan core using UDP-GlcNAc as the sugar donor. We determined the structure of human MGAT2 as a Mn2+-UDP donor analog complex and as a GlcNAc-Man₃GlcNAc₂-Asn acceptor complex to reveal the structural basis for substrate recognition and catalysis. The enzyme exhibits a GT-A Rossmann-like fold that employs conserved divalent cationdependent substrate interactions with the UDP-GlcNAc donor. MGAT2 interactions with the extended glycan acceptor are distinct from other related glycosyltransferases. These interactions are composed of a catalytic subsite that binds the Man-α1,6- monosaccharide acceptor and a distal exosite pocket that binds the GlcNAc-β1,2Man-α1,3Manβ- substrate “recognition arm.” Recognition arm interactions are similar to the enzyme–substrate interactions for Golgi α-mannosidase II, a glycoside hydrolase that acts just before MGAT2 in the Asn-linked glycan biosynthetic pathway. These data suggest that substrate binding by MGAT2 employs both conserved and convergent catalytic subsite modules to provide substrate selectivity and catalysis. More broadly, the MGAT2 active-site architecture demonstrates how glycosyltransferases create complementary modular templates for regiospecific extension of glycan structures in mammalian cells.
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National Institutes of Health (NIH)
P41GM103390; P01GM107012
Edited by Karen Colley, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, and accepted by Editorial Board Member Gregory A. Petsko March 23, 2018 (received for review September 28, 2017)
1R.K. and J.-Y.Y. contributed equally to this work.
Author contributions: G.-J.B., Z.A.W., and K.W.M. designed research; R.K., J.-Y.Y., J.H.S., L.L., A.R., and P.K.P. performed research; R.K., G.-J.B., Z.A.W., and K.W.M. analyzed data; and R.K., Z.A.W., and K.W.M. wrote the paper.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1716988115