Abstract

ABSTRACTA multigene polysaccharide utilization locus (PUL) encoding enzymes and surface carbohydrate (glycan)-binding proteins (SGBPs) was recently identified in prominent members of Bacteroidetes in the human gut and characterized in Bacteroides ovatus. This PUL-encoded system specifically targets mixed-linkage β1,3-1,4-glucans, a group of diet-derived carbohydrates that promote a healthy microbiota and have potential as prebiotics. The BoSGBPMLG-A protein encoded by the BACOVA_2743 gene is a SusD-like protein that plays a key role in the PUL’s specificity and functionality. Here, we perform a detailed analysis of the molecular determinants underlying carbohydrate binding by BoSGBPMLG-A, combining carbohydrate microarray technology with quantitative affinity studies and a high-resolution X-ray crystallography structure of the complex of BoSGBPMLG-A with a β1,3-1,4-nonasaccharide. We demonstrate its unique binding specificity toward β1,3-1,4-gluco-oligosaccharides, with increasing binding affinities up to the octasaccharide and dependency on the number and position of β1,3 linkages. The interaction is defined by a 41-Å-long extended binding site that accommodates the oligosaccharide in a mode distinct from that of previously described bacterial β1,3-1,4-glucan-binding proteins. In addition to the shape complementarity mediated by CH-π interactions, a complex hydrogen bonding network complemented by a high number of key ordered water molecules establishes additional specific interactions with the oligosaccharide. These support the twisted conformation of the β-glucan backbone imposed by the β1,3 linkages and explain the dependency on the oligosaccharide chain length. We propose that the specificity of the PUL conferred by BoSGBPMLG-A to import long β1,3-1,4-glucan oligosaccharides to the bacterial periplasm allows Bacteroidetes to outcompete bacteria that lack this PUL for utilization of β1,3-1,4-glucans.IMPORTANCE With the knowledge of bacterial gene systems encoding proteins that target dietary carbohydrates as a source of nutrients and their importance for human health, major efforts are being made to understand carbohydrate recognition by various commensal bacteria. Here, we describe an integrative strategy that combines carbohydrate microarray technology with structural studies to further elucidate the molecular determinants of carbohydrate recognition by BoSGBPMLG-A, a key protein expressed at the surface of Bacteroides ovatus for utilization of mixed-linkage β1,3-1,4-glucans. We have mapped at high resolution interactions that occur at the binding site of BoSGBPMLG-A and provide evidence for the role of key water-mediated interactions for fine specificity and affinity. Understanding at the molecular level how commensal bacteria, such as prominent members of Bacteroidetes, can differentially utilize dietary carbohydrates with potential prebiotic activities will shed light on possible ways to modulate the microbiome to promote human health.

Highlights

  • A multigene polysaccharide utilization locus (PUL) encoding enzymes and surface carbohydrate-binding proteins (SGBPs) was recently identified in prominent members of Bacteroidetes in the human gut and characterized in Bacteroides ovatus

  • BoSGBPMLG-A showed strong binding to barley and lichenan b-glucans and to the b1,3-1,4-glucan-enriched fraction isolated from Nanochloropsis oculata microalgae, similar to the binding profiles of CBM11 of Clostridium thermocellum (CtCBM11) and the b1,3-1,4-glucan-specific Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) BS400-3 (Fig. 2 and Table S2)

  • No interaction was observed with b1,3-glucans or with polysaccharides with a b1,4-linked backbone other than glucose, such as xylan and mannan, or to any of the other carbohydrate probes featured on the microarray, highlighting the preference of BoSGBPMLG-A for binding to mixed-linkage b1,3-1,4-glucans

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Summary

Introduction

A multigene polysaccharide utilization locus (PUL) encoding enzymes and surface carbohydrate (glycan)-binding proteins (SGBPs) was recently identified in prominent members of Bacteroidetes in the human gut and characterized in Bacteroides ovatus. This PUL-encoded system targets mixed-linkage b1,3-1,4-glucans, a group of diet-derived carbohydrates that promote a healthy microbiota and have potential as prebiotics. The symbiotic bacterium Bacteroides ovatus is a specialist in complex carbohydrates, carrying in its genome different colocalized gene clusters termed polysaccharide utilization loci (PUL) These encode CAZymes, surface carbohydrate (glycan)-binding proteins (generally designated SGBPs), TonB-dependent transporters (TBDTs), and transcriptional regulators, comprising complete systems to target and degrade major diet-derived and plant cell wall polysaccharides [1]. A b1,4-glucose-linked chain, as in the cellulose polysaccharide, is rigid and renders the polysaccharide less soluble in water, whereas the b1,3-linked glycosidic linkages confer flexibility and water solubility, creating kinks in the main chain and imposing a twisted conformation on the polysaccharide that challenges microbial degradation [9, 12]

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