A Bioorthogonal Precision Tool for Human N‑Acetylglucosaminyltransferase V
Posted on 2024-09-17 - 15:10
Correct elaboration
of N-linked glycans in the secretory pathway
of human cells is essential in physiology. Early N-glycan biosynthesis
follows an assembly line principle before undergoing crucial elaboration
points that feature the sequential incorporation of the sugar N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc). The activity of GlcNAc transferase
V (MGAT5) primes the biosynthesis of an N-glycan antenna that is heavily
upregulated in cancer. Still, the functional relevance and substrate
choice of MGAT5 are ill-defined. Here, we employ protein engineering
to develop a bioorthogonal substrate analog for the activity of MGAT5.
Chemoenzymatic synthesis is used to produce a collection of nucleotide-sugar
analogs with bulky, bioorthogonal acylamide side chains. We find that
WT-MGAT5 displays considerable activity toward such substrate analogues.
Protein engineering yields an MGAT5 variant that loses activity against
the native nucleotide sugar and increases activity toward a 4-azidobutyramide-containing
substrate analogue. By such restriction of substrate specificity,
we show that the orthogonal enzyme–substrate pair is suitable
to bioorthogonally tag glycoproteins. Through X-ray crystallography
and molecular dynamics simulations, we establish the structural basis
of MGAT5 engineering, informing the design rules for bioorthogonal
precision chemical tools.
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Liu, Yu; Bineva-Todd, Ganka; Meek, Richard W.; Mazo, Laura; Piniello, Beatriz; Moroz, Olga; et al. (2024). A Bioorthogonal Precision Tool for Human N‑Acetylglucosaminyltransferase V. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c05955