Probing the Substrate Specificity of Golgi α-Mannosidase II by Use of Synthetic Oligosaccharides and a Catalytic Nucleophile Mutant
- 18 June 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 130 (28) , 8975-8983
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja711248y
Abstract
Inhibition of Golgi α-mannosidase II (GMII), which acts late in the N-glycan processing pathway, provides a route to blocking cancer-induced changes in cell surface oligosaccharide structures. To probe the substrate requirements of GMII, oligosaccharides were synthesized that contained an α(1,3)- or α(1,6)-linked 1-thiomannoside. Surprisingly, these oligosaccharides were not observed in X-ray crystal structures of native Drosophila GMII (dGMII). However, a mutant enzyme in which the catalytic nucleophilic aspartate was changed to alanine (D204A) allowed visualization of soaked oligosaccharides and led to the identification of the binding site for the α(1,3)-linked mannoside of the natural substrate. These studies also indicate that the conformational change of the bound mannoside to a high-energy B2,5 conformation is facilitated by steric hindrance from, and the formation of strong hydrogen bonds to, Asp204. The observation that 1-thio-linked mannosides are not well tolerated by the catalytic site of dGMII led to the synthesis of a pentasaccharide containing the α(1,6)-linked Man of the natural substrate and the β(1,2)-linked GlcNAc moiety proposed to be accommodated by the extended binding site of the enzyme. A cocrystal structure of this compound with the D204A enzyme revealed the molecular interactions with the β(1,2)-linked GlcNAc. The structure is consistent with the ∼80-fold preference of dGMII for the cleavage of substrates containing a nonreducing β(1,2)-linked GlcNAc. By contrast, the lysosomal mannosidase lacks an equivalent GlcNAc binding site and kinetic analysis indicates oligomannoside substrates without non-reducing-terminal GlcNAc modifications are preferred, suggesting that selective inhibitors for GMII could exploit the additional binding specificity of the GlcNAc binding site.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structural Basis of the Inhibition of Golgi α-Mannosidase II by Mannostatin A and the Role of the Thiomethyl Moiety in Ligand−Protein InteractionsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2006
- The role of the active site Zn in the catalytic mechanism of the GH38 Golgi α-mannosidase II: Implications from noeuromycin inhibitionBiocatalysis and Biotransformation, 2006
- Crystal Structure of Thermobifida fusca Endoglucanase Cel6A in Complex with Substrate and Inhibitor: The Role of Tyrosine Y73 in Substrate Ring Distortion,Biochemistry, 2005
- Glycosidase mechanismsCurrent Opinion in Chemical Biology, 2002
- Substrate Distortion by a -Mannanase: Snapshots of the Michaelis and Covalent-Intermediate Complexes Suggest a B2,5 Conformation for the Transition StateAngewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 2002
- A General Semisynthetic Method for Fluorescent Saccharide-Biosensors Based on a LectinJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2000
- Approaches to Augmenting the Immunogenicity of Melanoma Gangliosides: From Whole Melanoma Cells to Ganglioside‐KLH Conjugate VaccinesImmunological Reviews, 1995
- Synthese von DD‐Heptosephosphaten als Substrate oder potentielle Inhibitoren für die Heptose‐SynthetaseEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1994
- Tumor cell surface β1–6 branched oligosaccharides and lung metastasisClinical & Experimental Metastasis, 1994
- Synthesis and conformational analysis of methyl 2‐O‐(α‐D‐Mannopyranosyl)‐α‐D‐mannopyranosideEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1991