Abstract

Blood type B-specific Streptomyces sp. 27S5 hemagglutinin (SHA) was discovered and characterized in the 1970s. Although strain 27S5 has been lost, the purified SHA protein survived intact under frozen conditions and retained its activity. Using modern techniques, here we further characterized SHA. Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance MS analysis determined the average molecular mass of SHA as 13,314.67 Da. MS of digested SHA peptides, Streptomyces genomic database matching, and N-terminal sequencing solved the 131-residue amino acid sequence of SHA. We found that SHA is homologous to N-terminally truncated hypothetical proteins encoded by the genomes of Streptomyces lavendulae, Streptomyces sp. Mg1, and others. The gene of the closest homologue in S. lavendulae, a putative polysaccharide deacetylase (PDSL), encodes 68 additional N-terminal amino acids, and its C terminus perfectly matched the SHA sequence, except for a single Ala-to-Glu amino acid difference. We expressed recombinant SHA(PDSL-A108E) (rSHA) as an enzymatically cleavable fusion protein in Escherichia coli, and glycan microarray analyses indicated that refolded rSHA exhibits the blood type B- and l-rhamnose-specific characteristics of authentic SHA, confirming that rSHA is essentially identical with SHA produced by Streptomyces sp. 27S5. We noted that SHA comprises three similar domains, representing 70% of the protein, and that these SHA domains partially overlap with annotated clostridial hydrophobic with conserved W domains. Furthermore, examination of GFP-tagged SHA revealed binding to microbial surfaces. rSHA may be useful both for studying the role of SHA/clostridial hydrophobic with conserved W domains in carbohydrate binding and for developing novel diagnostics and therapeutics for l-rhamnose-containing microorganisms.

Highlights

  • Blood type B-specific Streptomyces sp. 27S5 hemagglutinin (SHA) was discovered and characterized in the 1970s

  • We expressed recombinant SHA(PDSLA108E) as an enzymatically cleavable fusion protein in Escherichia coli, and glycan microarray analyses indicated that refolded rSHA exhibits the blood type B– and L-rhamnose– specific characteristics of authentic SHA, confirming that rSHA is essentially identical with SHA produced by Streptomyces sp. 27S5

  • Using a glycan array chip, we demonstrated that recombinant SHA(PDSLA108E) has the same carbohydrate-binding specificity and affinity as the archived SHA purified from Streptomyces sp. 27S5, which validated that it is the recombinant SHA

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Summary

Determination of the molecular mass of SHA using mass spectrometry

The molecular mass of SHA was previously estimated to be ϳ11 kDa, based on various approaches, including gel filtration in the presence of 6 M guanidine hydrochloride, SDS-PAGE, and sedimentation equilibrium analysis [3]. To determine the molecular mass of SHA more precisely, we applied electrospray ionization (ESI) Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) MS. This high-resolution mass spectrometric technique revealed a precise average molecular mass of 13,314.67 Da, a monoisotopic mass of 13,306.65 Da, and the presence of a covalently attached hexose in ϳ25% of the SHA molecules (Fig. 1)

Results
Solution of the primary structure of SHA
Sequence comparison of SHA and putative homologues
Amino acid sequence
Demonstration of rSHA binding to microbial surfaces
Discussion
ChW domain
Experimental procedures
Purification and characterization
Specific binding of SHA to gum arabic gels
NMR titration study
Mass spectrometry
Expression of an SHA homologous recombinant protein
Glycan microarray analyses
Full Text
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