Robinson Lloyd S, Lewis Warren G, Lewis Amanda L
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.
Department of Medicine, Center for Women's Infectious Disease Research, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.
J Biol Chem. 2017 Jul 14;292(28):11861-11872. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M116.769232. Epub 2017 May 19.
The gut harbors many symbiotic, commensal, and pathogenic microbes that break down and metabolize host carbohydrates. Sialic acids are prominent outermost carbohydrates on host glycoproteins called mucins and protect underlying glycan chains from enzymatic degradation. Sialidases produced by some members of the colonic microbiota can promote the expansion of several potential pathogens (, , and ) that do not produce sialidases. -Acetyl ester modifications of sialic acids help resist the action of many sialidases and are present at high levels in the mammalian colon. However, some gut bacteria, in turn, produce sialylate--acetylesterases to remove them. Here, we investigated -acetyl ester removal and sialic acid degradation by sialate--acetylesterases and sialidases, respectively, and subsequent utilization of host sialic acids by both commensal and pathogenic strains. foraging studies demonstrated that sialidase-dependent growth on mucin is enabled by EstA, a sialate -acetylesterase acting on glycosidically linked sialylate--acetylesterase substrates, particularly at neutral pH. Biochemical studies suggested that spontaneous migration of -acetyl esters on the sialic acid side chain, which can occur at colonic pH, may serve as a switch controlling EstA-assisted sialic acid liberation. Specifically, EstA did not act on -acetyl esters in their initial 7-position. However, following migration to the 9-position, glycans with -acetyl esters became susceptible to the sequential actions of bacterial esterases and sialidases. We conclude that EstA specifically unlocks the nutritive potential of 9--acetylated mucus sialic acids for foraging by bacteria that otherwise are prevented from accessing this carbon source.
肠道中存在许多共生、共栖和致病微生物,它们可分解并代谢宿主碳水化合物。唾液酸是宿主糖蛋白(称为黏蛋白)最外层突出的碳水化合物,可保护其下方的聚糖链免受酶解。结肠微生物群的某些成员产生的唾液酸酶可促进几种不产生唾液酸酶的潜在病原体(如大肠杆菌、肺炎克雷伯菌和脆弱拟杆菌)的增殖。唾液酸的N-乙酰酯修饰有助于抵抗许多唾液酸酶的作用,且在哺乳动物结肠中含量很高。然而,一些肠道细菌会产生唾液酸-N-乙酰酯酶来去除这些修饰。在此,我们分别研究了唾液酸-N-乙酰酯酶和唾液酸酶对N-乙酰酯的去除及唾液酸的降解,以及共生菌和致病菌菌株随后对宿主唾液酸的利用情况。觅食研究表明,EstA(一种作用于糖苷连接的唾液酸-N-乙酰酯酶底物的唾液酸-N-乙酰酯酶)可使大肠杆菌在黏蛋白上依赖唾液酸酶生长,尤其在中性pH条件下。生化研究表明,在结肠pH值下,唾液酸侧链上的N-乙酰酯可能会自发迁移,这可能是控制EstA辅助唾液酸释放的一个开关。具体而言,EstA不会作用于其初始7位的N-乙酰酯。然而,迁移至9位后,带有N-乙酰酯的聚糖会变得易受细菌酯酶和唾液酸酶的连续作用影响。我们得出结论,EstA可特异性地释放9-O-乙酰化黏液唾液酸的营养潜力,以供原本无法获取此碳源的细菌觅食。