Carbohydrate-active enzymes from Akkermansia muciniphila break down mucin O-glycans to completion
某种肠道细菌
粘蛋白
聚糖
碳水化合物
酶
化学
生物化学
微生物学
生物
糖蛋白
肠道菌群
作者
Cassie R. Bakshani,Taiwo O. Ojuri,Bo Pilgaard,Jesper Holck,Ross S. McInnes,Radoslaw P. Kozak,Maria I. Zakhour,Sara Çakaj,Manon Kerouedan,Emily Newton,David N. Bolam,Lucy I. Crouch
Akkermansia muciniphila is a human microbial symbiont residing in the mucosal layer of the large intestine. Its main carbon source is the highly heterogeneous mucin glycoprotein, and it uses an array of carbohydrate-active enzymes and sulfatases to access this complex energy source. Here we describe the biochemical characterization of 54 glycoside hydrolases, 11 sulfatases and 1 polysaccharide lyase from A. muciniphila to provide a holistic understanding of their carbohydrate-degrading activities. This was achieved using a variety of liquid chromatography techniques, mass spectrometry, enzyme kinetics and thin-layer chromatography. These results are supported with A. muciniphila growth and whole-cell assays. We find that these enzymes can act synergistically to degrade the O-glycans on the mucin polypeptide to completion, down to the core N-acetylgalactosaime. In addition, these enzymes can break down human breast milk oligosaccharide, ganglioside and globoside glycan structures, showing their capacity to target a variety of host glycans. These data provide a resource to understand the full degradative capability of the gut microbiome member A. muciniphila.