Abstract

Epimerization of sugar nucleotides is central to the structural diversification of monosaccharide building blocks for cellular biosynthesis. Epimerase applicability to carbohydrate synthesis can be limited, however, by the high degree of substrate specificity exhibited by most sugar nucleotide epimerases. Here, we discovered a promiscuous type of CDP-tyvelose 2-epimerase (TyvE)-like enzyme that promotes C2-epimerization in all nucleotide (CDP, UDP, GDP, ADP, TDP)-activated forms of d-glucose. This new epimerase, originating from Thermodesulfatator atlanticus, is a functional homodimer that contains one tightly bound NAD+/subunit and shows optimum activity at 70°C and pH 9.5. The enzyme exhibits a k cat with CDP-dglucose of ∼1.0 min-1 (pH 7.5, 60°C). To characterize the epimerase kinetically and probe its substrate specificity, we developed chemo-enzymatic syntheses for CDP-dmannose, CDP-6-deoxy-dglucose, CDP-3-deoxy-dglucose and CDP-6-deoxy-dxylo-hexopyranos-4-ulose. Attempts to obtain CDP-dparatose and CDP-dtyvelose were not successful. Using high-resolution carbohydrate analytics and in situ NMR to monitor the enzymatic conversions (60°C, pH 7.5), we show that the CDP-dmannose/CDP-dglucose ratio at equilibrium is 0.67 (± 0.1), determined from the kinetic Haldane relationship and directly from the reaction. We further show that deoxygenation at sugar C6 enhances the enzyme activity 5-fold compared to CDP-dglucose whereas deoxygenation at C3 renders the substrate inactive. Phylogenetic analysis places the T. atlanticus epimerase into a distinct subgroup within the sugar nucleotide epimerase family of SDR (short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases), for which the current study now provides the functional context. Collectively, our results expand an emerging toolbox of epimerase-catalyzed reactions for sugar nucleotide synthesis.IMPORTANCE Epimerases of the sugar nucleotide-modifying class of enzymes have attracted considerable interest in carbohydrate (bio)chemistry, for the mechanistic challenges and the opportunities for synthesis involved in the reactions catalyzed. Discovery of new epimerases with expanded scope of sugar nucleotide substrates used is important to promote the mechanistic inquiry and can facilitate the development of new enzyme applications. Here, a CDP-tyvelose 2-epimerase-like enzyme from Thermodesulfatator atlanticus is shown to catalyze sugar C2 epimerization in CDP-glucose and other nucleotide-activated forms of dglucose. The reactions are new to nature in the context of enzymatic sugar nucleotide modification. The current study explores the substrate scope of the discovered C2-epimerase and, based on modeling, suggests structure-function relationships that may be important for specificity and catalysis.

Highlights

  • Epimerization of sugar nucleotides is central to the structural diversification of monosaccharide building blocks for cellular biosynthesis

  • Sugar nucleotide-dependent epimerases complement the synthetic repertoire and the applied perspective of enzymatic epimerization. Limitations in their applicability to carbohydrate synthesis can arise from the high substrate specificity that many of these enzymes exhibit [19, 21, 26]

  • Using motif-based sequence analysis, we found that residues of the immediate catalytic center (Thr124, Tyr164, and Lys168) as well as residues for binding of the nicotinamide cofactor (Gly7, Gly10, and Gly13) and cytidine 59-diphosphate (Trp207, Trp210, and Phe211) are conserved in stTyvE and ypTyvE

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Summary

Introduction

Epimerization of sugar nucleotides is central to the structural diversification of monosaccharide building blocks for cellular biosynthesis. Offering CDP-Glc (1 mM) to the purified protein (25.4 mM), we showed by HPLC that the substrate was converted into a single detectable product that was confirmed to be CDP-Man (Fig. 3A). TaCPa2E-catalyzed C-2 epimerization is a freely reversible reaction in which CDP-Glc and CDP-Man are converted into one another, proceeding through a transient C-2 keto intermediate [19].

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