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Distinct roles of N- and O-glycans in cellulase activity and stability

Year: 2017

Journal: Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., Volume 114, DEC 26, page 13667–13672

Authors: Amore, Antonella; Knott, Brandon C.; Supekar, Nitin T.; Shajahan, Asif; Azadi, Parastoo; Zhao, Peng; Wells, Lance; Linger, Jeffrey G.; Hobdey, Sarah E.; Vander Wall, Todd A.; Shollenberger, Todd; Yarbrough, John M.; Tan, Zhongping; Crowley, Michael F.; Himmel, Michael E.; Decker, Stephen R.; Beckham, Gregg T.; Taylor, Larry E., II

Keywords: glycoside hydrolase; glycosylation; intrinsically disordered protein; mannosylation; cellulase

In nature, many microbes secrete mixtures of glycoside hydrolases, oxidoreductases, and accessory enzymes to deconstruct polysaccharides and lignin in plants. These enzymes are often decorated with N- and O-glycosylation, the roles of which have been broadly attributed to protection from proteolysis, as the extracellular milieu is an aggressive environment. Glycosylation has been shown to some-times affect activity, but these effects are not fully understood. Here, we examine N- and O-glycosylation on a model, multimodular glycoside hydrolase family 7 cellobiohydrolase (Cel7A), which exhibits an O-glycosylated carbohydrate-binding module (CBM) and an O-glycosylated linker connected to an N- and O-glycosylated catalytic domain (CD)-a domain architecture common to many biomass-degrading enzymes. We report consensus maps for Cel7A glycosylation that include glycan sites and motifs. Additionally, we examine the roles of glycans on activity, substrate binding, and thermal and proteolytic stability. N-glycan knockouts on the CD demonstrate that N-glycosylation has little impact on cellulose conversion or binding, but does have major stability impacts. O-glycans on the CBM have little impact on binding, proteolysis, or activity in thewhole-enzyme context. However, linker O-glycans greatly impact cellulose conversion via their contribution to proteolysis resistance. Molecular simulations predict an additional role for linker O-glycans, namely that they are responsible for maintaining separation between ordered domains when Cel7A is engaged on cellulose, as models predict alpha-helix formation and decreased cellulose interaction for the nonglycosylated linker. Overall, this study reveals key roles for N- and O-glycosylation that are likely broadly applicable to other plant cell-wall-degrading enzymes.