Abstract

Caenorabditis elegans bus-4 glycosyltransferase mutants are resistant to infection by Microbacterium nematophilum, Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and have altered susceptibility to two Leucobacter species Verde1 and Verde2. Our objective in this study was to define the glycosylation changes leading to this phenotype to better understand how these changes lead to pathogen resistance. We performed MALDI-TOF MS, tandem MS and GC/MS experiments to reveal fine structural detail for the bus-4 N- and O-glycan pools. We observed dramatic changes in O-glycans and moderate ones in N-glycan pools compared to the parent strain. Ce core-I glycans, the nematode's mucin glycan equivalent, were doubled in abundance, halved in charge and bore shifts in terminal substitutions. The fucosyl O-glycans, Ce core-II and neutral fucosyl forms, were also increased in abundance as were fucosyl N-glycans. Quantitative expression analysis revealed that two mucins, let-653 and osm-8, were upregulated nearly 40 fold and also revealed was a dramatic increase in GDP-Man 4,6 dehydratease expression. We performed detailed lectin binding studies that showed changes in glycoconjugates in the surface coat, cuticle surface and intestine. The combined changes in cell surface glycoconjugate distribution, increased abundance and altered properties of mucin provide an environment where likely the above pathogens are not exposed to normal glycoconjugate dependent cues leading to barriers to these bacterial infections.

Highlights

  • Caenorhabditis elegans can be infected by over forty microbial pathogens [1]

  • It is closely related to C. elegans gene C38H2.2 (BLAST score 2e-34 relative to bus-4) [8], which is an ortholog of human T-synthase and has demonstrated core 1 O-glycan synthetic activity by catalyzing the addition of Gal to GalNAca1-Ser/Thr glycopeptide in vitro [23]

  • The most dramatic changes were seen in the Ce core-I O-glycans which contain the conserved Gal b1,3GalNAc core seen in higher eukaryote core-1 and core-2 O-glycans [35]

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Summary

Introduction

Caenorhabditis elegans can be infected by over forty microbial pathogens [1]. Among these are the nematode specific pathogen, Microbacterium nematophilum, and the human pathogens Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. M. nematophilum infects the anus, rectum and surrounding cuticle of the nematode causing localized swelling and constipation [2]. Y. pestis and Y. psudotuberculosis do not directly infect C. elegans. Rather these bacteria secrete an exopolysaccharide that adheres to the head region of the nematode, causing starvation [3]. The bus and bah genetic screens have isolated mutants resistant to M. nematophilum and Yersinia spp. respectively, and there is significant genetic overlap between the screens demonstrating that a series of the same genes are required for both pathogenic processes

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