Abstract

Heparin and heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans (HSGAGs) comprise a chemically heterogeneous class of sulfated polysaccharides. The development of structure-activity relationships for this class of polysaccharides requires the identification and characterization of degrading enzymes with defined substrate specificity and enzymatic activity. Toward this end, we report here the molecular cloning and extensive structure-function analysis of a 6-O-sulfatase from the Gram-negative bacterium Flavobacterium heparinum. In addition, we report the recombinant expression of this enzyme in Escherichia coli in a soluble, active form and identify it as a specific HSGAG sulfatase. We further define the mechanism of action of the enzyme through biochemical and structural studies. Through the use of defined substrates, we investigate the kinetic properties of the enzyme. This analysis was complemented by homology-based molecular modeling studies that sought to rationalize the substrate specificity of the enzyme and mode of action through an analysis of the active-site topology of the enzyme including identifying key enzyme-substrate interactions and assigning key amino acids within the active site of the enzyme. Taken together, our structural and biochemical studies indicate that 6-O-sulfatase is a predominantly exolytic enzyme that specifically acts on N-sulfated or N-acetylated 6-O-sulfated glucosamines present at the non-reducing end of HSGAG oligosaccharide substrates. This requirement for the N-acetyl or N-sulfo groups on the glucosamine substrate can be explained through eliciting favorable interactions with key residues within the active site of the enzyme. These findings provide a framework that enables the use of 6-O-sulfatase as a tool for HSGAG structure-activity studies as well as expand our biochemical and structural understanding of this important class of enzymes.

Highlights

  • Heparin and heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans (HSGAGs) comprise a chemically heterogeneous class of sulfated polysaccharides

  • We report here the molecular cloning and extensive structure-function analysis of a 6-O-sulfatase from the Gram-negative bacterium Flavobacterium heparinum

  • Heparin/Heparan Sulfate 6-O-Sulfatase from F. heparinum enzymes derived from F. heparinum, including the heparinases as well as the ⌬4,5-glycuronidase [17] and the 2-O-sulfatase [18], we reasoned that cloning and characterization of additional sulfatases would enable the development of important tools for investigating HSGAG structure

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Reagents—Fluorescent glucopyranoside substrates 4-methyllumbelliferyl-␣/␤-D-glucopyranoside (4-MU-␣-D-Glc and 4-MU-␤-D-Glc) were purchased from EMD Biosciences, Inc. (San Diego, CA). 6-O-Sulfated fluorogenic glycopyranoside derivatives were obtained through Toronto Research Chemicals (Toronto, Canada). Coupled Enzyme Assay for the Determination of Biochemical Reaction Conditions and Steady-state Kinetics—Indirect measurement of enzyme activity was made using a fluorimetrically based plate assay in which the prerequisite desulfation of the appropriate glucopyranoside 134-methlybelliferone substrate by the 6-O-sulfatase was coupled to the glucosidase-mediated hydrolysis of the stereo-specific 134-glycosidic linkage between the pyranose ring and the adjoining fluorophore. Compositional Analyses of Sulfatase-treated Heparin—20 ␮g of heparin was preincubated with 10 ␮M 6-O-sulfatase for 8 h at 30 °C in a 20-␮l reaction volume that included 25 mM sodium acetate, pH 7.0, and 2 mM calcium acetate, pH 7.0 Following this preincubation, the enzyme was inactivated by heat denaturation at 95 °C for 10 min, and heparin was exhaustively digested overnight at 37 °C by the addition of 2 ␮l of a concentrated enzyme mixture containing heparinase I and III. A distance-dependent dielectric constant of 4*r and scaling of 0.5 for the p1– 4 cross-terms were used in the Discover module for the AMBER force field-based simulations according to specifications in the InsightII manual

RESULTS
Amino acids
Positioned to stack with the pyranose ring of the Glc sugar
DISCUSSION
Ram Sasisekharan
Full Text
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