Abstract

Polysaccharide lyases (PLs) catalyze the depolymerization of anionic polysaccharides via a β-elimination mechanism. PLs also play important roles in microbial pathogenesis, participating in bacterial invasion and toxin spread into the host tissue via degradation of the host extracellular matrix, or in microbial biofilm formation often associated with enhanced drug resistance. Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is a Gram-negative bacterium that is among the emerging multidrug-resistant organisms associated with chronic lung infections as well as with cystic fibrosis patients. A putative alginate lyase (Smlt1473) from S. maltophilia was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli, purified in a one-step fashion via affinity chromatography, and activity as well as specificity determined for a range of polysaccharides. Interestingly, Smlt1473 catalyzed the degradation of not only alginate, but poly-β-D-glucuronic acid and hyaluronic acid as well. Furthermore, the pH optimum for enzymatic activity is substrate-dependent, with optimal hyaluronic acid degradation at pH 5, poly-β-D-glucuronic acid degradation at pH 7, and alginate degradation at pH 9. Analysis of the degradation products revealed that each substrate was cleaved endolytically into oligomers comprised predominantly of even numbers of sugar groups, with lower accumulation of trimers and pentamers. Collectively, these results imply that Smlt1473 is a multifunctional PL that exhibits broad substrate specificity, but utilizes pH as a mechanism to achieve selectivity.

Highlights

  • Polysaccharide lyases degrade anionic polysaccharides and are important in bacterial biofilm formation and host-pathogen interactions

  • A putative alginate lyase (Smlt1473) from S. maltophilia was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli, purified in a one-step fashion via affinity chromatography, and activity as well as specificity determined for a range of polysaccharides

  • Our results are most consistent with a mechanism in which (i) the C5 carboxylate group is neutralized by arginine and asparagine and (ii) tyrosine or histidine acts as the base and tyrosine as the acid

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Summary

Background

Polysaccharide lyases degrade anionic polysaccharides and are important in bacterial biofilm formation and host-pathogen interactions. PLs play important roles in microbial pathogenesis, participating in bacterial invasion and toxin spread into the host tissue via degradation of the host extracellular matrix, or in microbial biofilm formation often associated with enhanced drug resistance. Alginate is a linear copolymer comprised of D-mannuronic acid (ManA) and L-guluronic acid (GulA) arranged in repeating poly-␤-ManA blocks, poly-␣GulA blocks, or alternating poly-MG blocks [6] Bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa synthesize and secrete alginate as a major component of microbial biofilms. To understand the role that PLs may play in microbial biofilm formation as well as virulence, we characterized a predicted alginate lyase (Smlt1473) from Stenotrophomonas maltophilia strain k279a. Our results indicate Smlt1473 is a novel PL with broad, but pH-regulated, substrate specificity, which has implications for both biofilm formation and bacterial pathogenesis

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