Abstract
Glycosyltransferases are a large family of enzymes responsible for covalently linking sugar monosaccharides to a variety of organic substrates. These enzymes drive the synthesis of complex oligosaccharides known as glycans, which play key roles in inter-cellular interactions across all the kingdoms of life; they also catalyze sugar attachment during the synthesis of small-molecule metabolites such as plant flavonoids. A given glycosyltransferase enzyme is typically responsible for attaching a specific donor monosaccharide, via a specific glycosidic linkage, to a specific moiety on the acceptor substrate. However these enzymes are often promiscuous, able catalyze linkages between a variety of donors and acceptors. In this review we discuss distinct classes of glycosyltransferase promiscuity, each illustrated by enzymatic examples from small-molecule or glycan synthesis. We highlight the physical causes of promiscuity, and its biochemical consequences. Structural studies of glycosyltransferases involved in glycan synthesis show that they make specific contacts with ‘recognition motifs’ that are much smaller than the full oligosaccharide substrate. There is a wide range in the sizes of glycosyltransferase recognition motifs: highly promiscuous enzymes recognize monosaccharide or disaccharide motifs across multiple oligosaccharides, while highly specific enzymes recognize large, complex motifs found on few oligosaccharides. In eukaryotes, the localization of glycosyltransferases within compartments of the Golgi apparatus may play a role in mitigating the glycan variability caused by enzyme promiscuity.
Highlights
The biosynthesis of several physiologically important small molecules and oligosaccharides requires the covalent attachment of monosaccharides
A important class of molecules synthesized by GTases, are linear or branched oligosaccharides covalently linked to proteins or lipids
The β4GalT1 enzyme can act directly on a GlcNAc monosaccharide [8, Chapter 5] [57]. This enzyme is highly promiscuous, able to act in almost any context where this recognition motif is found on larger oligosaccharides
Summary
The biosynthesis of several physiologically important small molecules and oligosaccharides requires the covalent attachment of monosaccharides. GTases catalyze glycosidic linkages between monosaccharides on a donor substrate (usually a nucleotide-linked sugar) and a moiety on an acceptor substrate (a small molecule or oligosaccharide) (Figure 1A). A promiscuous enzyme is one that catalyzes multiple reactions with distinct chemistries, or acts on multiple distinct substrates [28,29,30].
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