Abstract
Glycans decorate proteins and affect their biological function, including protection against proteolytic degradation. However, pathogenic, and commensal bacteria have evolved specific glycoproteases that overcome the steric impediment posed by carbohydrates, cleaving glycoproteins precisely at their glycosylation site(s). Medically relevant Acinetobacter strains employ their type II secretion system (T2SS) to secrete the glycoprotease CpaA, which contributes to virulence. Previously, CpaA was shown to cleave two O-linked glycoproteins, factors V and XII, leading to reduced blood coagulation. In this work, we show that CpaA cleaves a broader range of O-linked human glycoproteins, including several glycoproteins involved in complement activation, such as CD55 and CD46. However, only CD55 was removed from the cell surface, while CD46 remained unaltered during the Acinetobacter nosocomialis infection assay. We show that CpaA has a unique consensus target sequence that consists of a glycosylated serine or threonine residue after a proline residue (P-S/T), and its activity is not affected by sialic acids. Molecular modeling and mutagenesis analysis of CpaA suggest that the indole ring of Trp493 and the ring of the Pro residue in the substrate form a key interaction that contributes to CpaA sequence selectivity. Similar bacterial glycoproteases have recently gained attention as tools for proteomic analysis of human glycoproteins, and CpaA appears to be a robust and attractive new component of the glycoproteomics toolbox. Combined, our work provides insight into the function and possible application of CpaA, a member of a widespread class of broad-spectrum bacterial glycoproteases involved in host-pathogen interactions.IMPORTANCE CpaA is a glycoprotease expressed by members of the Acinetobacter baumannii-calcoaceticus complex, and it is the first bona fide secreted virulence factor identified in these species. Here, we show that CpaA cleaves multiple targets precisely at O-glycosylation sites preceded by a Pro residue. This feature, together with the observation that sialic acid does not impact CpaA activity, makes this enzyme an attractive tool for the analysis of O-linked human protein for biotechnical and diagnostic purposes. Previous work identified proteins involved in blood coagulation as targets of CpaA. Our work broadens the set of targets of CpaA, pointing toward additional roles in bacterium-host interactions. We propose that CpaA belongs to an expanding class of functionally defined glycoproteases that targets multiple O-linked host glycoproteins.
Highlights
Glycans decorate proteins and affect their biological function, including protection against proteolytic degradation
Members of the Acinetobacter baumannii-calcoaceticus complex are a frequent cause of serious multidrug-resistant infections that are associated with high mortality, and they are a top priority for the research and development of new antimicrobial therapies [1, 2]
The present work expands the known targets of CpaA and indicates that CpaA is a broad-spectrum enzyme with the ability to cleave various O-linked human glycoproteins
Summary
Glycans decorate proteins and affect their biological function, including protection against proteolytic degradation. We show that CpaA cleaves multiple targets precisely at O-glycosylation sites preceded by a Pro residue This feature, together with the observation that sialic acid does not impact CpaA activity, makes this enzyme an attractive tool for the analysis of O-linked human protein for biotechnical and diagnostic purposes. 20 to 60 T2SS effectors are secreted by any given Acinetobacter strain, and these proteins are involved in lipid assimilation, serum resistance, colonization of various host tissues, antibiotic resistance, and biofilm formation [3, 4, 7, 11]. Structural studies confirmed that CpaA and CpaB strongly interact in a 1:1 ratio via a novel protease-chaperone arrangement in which CpaA surrounds CpaB [8, 13] This unusual configuration was not observed in other previously characterized T2SS chaperone/effector pairs [14]. The full scope of CpaA substrates and the basis for their recognition by CpaA remain poorly understood
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