Abstract

Commensal and pathogenic bacteria have evolved efficient enzymatic pathways to feed on host carbohydrates, including protein-linked glycans. Most proteins of the human innate and adaptive immune system are glycoproteins where the glycan is critical for structural and functional integrity. Besides enabling nutrition, the degradation of host N-glycans serves as a means for bacteria to modulate the host’s immune system by for instance removing N-glycans on immunoglobulin G. The commensal bacterium Cutibacterium acnes is a gram-positive natural bacterial species of the human skin microbiota. Under certain circumstances, C. acnes can cause pathogenic conditions, acne vulgaris, which typically affects 80% of adolescents, and can become critical for immunosuppressed transplant patients. Others have shown that C. acnes can degrade certain host O-glycans, however, no degradation pathway for host N-glycans has been proposed. To investigate this, we scanned the C. acnes genome and were able to identify a set of gene candidates consistent with a cytoplasmic N-glycan-degradation pathway of the canonical eukaryotic N-glycan core. We also found additional gene sequences containing secretion signals that are possible candidates for initial trimming on the extracellular side. Furthermore, one of the identified gene products of the cytoplasmic pathway, AEE72695, was produced and characterized, and found to be a functional, dimeric exo-β-1,4-mannosidase with activity on the β-1,4 glycosidic bond between the second N-acetylglucosamine and the first mannose residue in the canonical eukaryotic N-glycan core. These findings corroborate our model of the cytoplasmic part of a C. acnes N-glycan degradation pathway.

Highlights

  • More than two-thirds of all human proteins are predicted to be glycosylated [1], which makes glycosylation one of the most common post-translational protein modifications [2,3]

  • The GH38 and glycoside hydrolase family 5 subfamily 18 (GH5_18) genes cluster together in all C. acnes strains, beyond which variation occurs in accessory functions

  • We note that this gene pair is present in genomes of other bacteria associated with the human microflora, such as Bifidobacterium breve, Bifidobacterium longum, Dermabacter vaginalis and Arcanobacterium haemolyticum

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Summary

Methods

C. acnes exo-β-mannosidase active on the N-glycan core other C. acnes genomes publicly available in the NCBI database. AEE72695, coding for an enzyme classified in CAZy as belonging to family 5, subfamily 18 (GH5_18) was selected for a more detailed phylogenetic analysis, and we hereafter refer to this gene product as CaMan5_18. PhyML was used to create a maximum likelihood tree [34] available at (http://www.phylogeny.fr) [35]. ESPript 3 was used to display the sequence alignment (http://espript.ibcp.fr/ESPript/cgi-bin/ESPript.cgi) [37] using pre-aligned sequences from Clustal X

Results
Discussion
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