Abstract

Glycans are major nutrients available to the human gut microbiota. The Bacteroides are generalist glycan degraders, and this function is mediated largely by polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs). The genomes of several Bacteroides species contain a PUL, PUL1,6-β-glucan, that was predicted to target mixed linked plant 1,3;1,4-β-glucans. To test this hypothesis we characterized the proteins encoded by this locus in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, a member of the human gut microbiota. We show here that PUL1,6-β-glucan does not orchestrate the degradation of a plant polysaccharide but targets a fungal cell wall glycan, 1,6-β-glucan, which is a growth substrate for the bacterium. The locus is up-regulated by 1,6-β-glucan and encodes two enzymes, a surface endo-1,6-β-glucanase, BT3312, and a periplasmic β-glucosidase that targets primarily 1,6-β-glucans. The non-catalytic proteins encoded by PUL1,6-β-glucan target 1,6-β-glucans and comprise a surface glycan-binding protein and a SusD homologue that delivers glycans to the outer membrane transporter. We identified the central role of the endo-1,6-β-glucanase in 1,6-β-glucan depolymerization by deleting bt3312, which prevented the growth of B. thetaiotaomicron on 1,6-β-glucan. The crystal structure of BT3312 in complex with β-glucosyl-1,6-deoxynojirimycin revealed a TIM barrel catalytic domain that contains a deep substrate-binding cleft tailored to accommodate the hook-like structure adopted by 1,6-β-glucan. Specificity is driven by the complementarity of the enzyme active site cleft and the conformation of the substrate. We also noted that PUL1,6-β-glucan is syntenic to many PULs from other Bacteroidetes, suggesting that utilization of yeast and fungal cell wall 1,6-β-glucans is a widespread adaptation within the human microbiota.

Highlights

  • Glycans are major nutrients available to the human gut microbiota

  • PUL1,6-␤-glucan was predicted to extend from bt3309 to bt3314 (Fig. 1A) and is predicted to encode five proteins: a SusR type regulator (BT3309), a SusCD-like pair (BT3310 –11), and enzymes belonging to GH30_3 (BT3312) and GH families 3 (GH3) (BT3314)

  • The PUL was not activated when B. thetaiotaomicron was cultured on ␣-mannan. These data indicate that PUL1,6-␤-glucan encodes the pustulan degrading apparatus of B. thetaiotaomicron. This assumption was confirmed when the bacterium was shown to be unable to grow on pustulan when the gene encoding the predicted surface GH30_3 enzyme was deleted from the chromosome (Fig. 1E)

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Summary

Introduction

Glycans are major nutrients available to the human gut microbiota. The Bacteroides are generalist glycan degraders, and this function is mediated largely by polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs). The genomes of several Bacteroides species contain a PUL, PUL1,6-␤-glucan, that was predicted to target mixed linked plant 1,3;1,4-␤-glucans To test this hypothesis we characterized the proteins encoded by this locus in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, a member of the human gut microbiota. We show here that PUL1,6-␤-glucan does not orchestrate the degradation of a plant polysaccharide but targets a fungal cell wall glycan, 1,6-␤-glucan, which is a growth substrate for the bacterium. Surface enzyme(s) and glycan-binding proteins (SGBPs) orchestrate degradation of polysaccharides into smaller oligosaccharides that can be imported by the SusCD-like complex, a TonB-dependent membrane transporter [5]. GHs are grouped into sequence-based families on the CAZy database (www.cazy.org) [6].5 Within these families the enzyme fold, catalytic apparatus, and mechanism are largely conserved. Some of the GH families have been divided into sequence-related subfamilies, which can provide insight into the sequence motifs that confer the substrate specificities evident in these related enzymes [7, 8]

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