Sulfoquinovose synthase - an important enzyme in the N-glycosylation pathway of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius

Journal Article (2011)
Author(s)

Benjamin H. Meyer (Max-Planck Institute for terrestrial Microbiology)

Behnam Zolghadr (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Elham Peyfoon (Imperial College London)

Martin Pabst (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Maria Panico (Imperial College London)

Howard R. Morris (Imperial College London)

Stuart M. Haslam (Imperial College London)

Paul Messner (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Christina Schäffer (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

undefined More Authors (External organisation)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2011.07875.x Final published version
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2011
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
5
Volume number
82
Pages (from-to)
1150-1163
Downloads counter
222

Abstract

Recently, the Surface (S)-layer glycoprotein of the thermoacidophilic crenarchaeote Sulfolobus acidocaldarius was found to be N-glycosylated with a heterogeneous family of glycans, with the largest having a composition Glc 1Man 2GlcNAc 2 plus 6-sulfoquinovose. However, genetic analyses of genes involved in the N-glycosylation process in Crenarchaeota were missing so far. In this study we identify a gene cluster involved in the biosynthesis of sulfoquinovose and important for the assembly of the S-layer N-glycans. A successful markerless in-frame deletion of agl3 resulted in a decreased molecular mass of the S-layer glycoprotein SlaA and the flagellin FlaB, indicating a change in the N-glycan composition. Analyses with nanoLC ES-MS/MS confirmed the presence of only a reduced trisaccharide structure composed of Man 1GlcNAc 2, missing the sulfoquinovose, a mannose and glucose. Biochemical studies of the recombinant Agl3 confirmed the proposed function as a UDP-sulfoquinovose synthase. Furthermore, S.acidocaldarius cells lacking agl3 had a significantly lower growth rate at elevated salt concentrations compared with the background strain, underlining the importance of the N-glycosylation to maintain an intact and stable cell envelope, to enable the survival of S.acidocaldarius in its extreme environment.