Abstract

BackgroundBacterial interactions with the environment- and/or host largely depend on the bacterial glycome. The specificities of a bacterial glycome are largely determined by glycosyltransferases (GTs), the enzymes involved in transferring sugar moieties from an activated donor to a specific substrate. Of these GTs their coding regions, but mainly also their substrate specificity are still largely unannotated as most sequence-based annotation flows suffer from the lack of characterized sequence motifs that can aid in the prediction of the substrate specificity.ResultsIn this work, we developed an analysis flow that uses sequence-based strategies to predict novel GTs, but also exploits a network-based approach to infer the putative substrate classes of these predicted GTs. Our analysis flow was benchmarked with the well-documented GT-repertoire of Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11168 and applied to the probiotic model Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG to expand our insights in the glycosylation potential of this bacterium. In L. rhamnosus GG we could predict 48 GTs of which eight were not previously reported. For at least 20 of these GTs a substrate relation was inferred.ConclusionsWe confirmed through experimental validation our prediction of WelI acting upstream of WelE in the biosynthesis of exopolysaccharides. We further hypothesize to have identified in L. rhamnosus GG the yet undiscovered genes involved in the biosynthesis of glucose-rich glycans and novel GTs involved in the glycosylation of proteins. Interestingly, we also predict GTs with well-known functions in peptidoglycan synthesis to also play a role in protein glycosylation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-349) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Bacterial interactions with the environment- and/or host largely depend on the bacterial glycome

  • As Hidden Markov Models (HMMs)-based screenings, definitely those performed with the least GT-specific HMMs, tend to find many non-specific hits, predictions were further filtered using a protein fold recognition step: GTs predicted by the HMM profiling were only retained if they contained a three-dimensional fold with significant homology to folds present in experimentally confirmed GTs from any species

  • The results of the HMM based screening in both L. rhamnosus GG and C. jejuni NCTC 11168 before and after filtering with the fold based predictions are shown in Figure 2, together with the most abundant GO categories present amongst the predicted GTs

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Summary

Introduction

Bacterial interactions with the environment- and/or host largely depend on the bacterial glycome. The specificities of a bacterial glycome are largely determined by glycosyltransferases (GTs), the enzymes involved in transferring sugar moieties from an activated donor to a specific substrate. GTs transfer glycan monomers directly to the final substrate and en bloc glycosylation, in which the sugar moiety is first assembled and only transferred to the final substrate by an specialized GT (oligosaccharyltransferase (OST) or polymerase) [4,5] The latter mechanism is by far the best documented, and is involved in the biosynthesis of heteropolymeric EPS/CPS, O-antigens in LPS, and even PG biosynthesis, highlighting the commonalities in the biosynthesis of these glycoconjugates [5]. Apart from their general role in glycosylation, the specificities of most of the GTs and the cellular role of their end products are still largely unknown. Most of the substrate specificities of GTs involved in LPS, PG and glycoproteins have been described in Gramnegatives [6,7], while glycosylation in Gram-positives is much less studied

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