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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2008, p. 3140-3146, Vol. 190, No. 9
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00056-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Life Sciences, Ben Gurion University, Beersheva 84105, Israel,1 Istituto di Chimica Biomolecolare, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Pozzuoli (NA) 80078, Italy,2 Division of Molecular Biosciences, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom,3 M-SCAN, Ltd., Wokingham, Berks RG41 2TZ, United Kingdom4
Received 11 January 2008/ Accepted 16 February 2008
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After having chemically characterized the N-linked glycan moieties found on both the flagellins and S-layer glycoprotein of Methanococcus voltae (26), Jarrell and coworkers subsequently identified two gene products, i.e., AglA and AglB, involved in N glycosylation of these target proteins (7). At the same time, Abu-Qarn and Eichler (1) used bioinformatics to identify genes in the haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii homologous to eukaryal and bacterial sequences encoding proteins known to participate in N glycosylation. By next addressing the glycosylation status of a reporter glycoprotein, i.e., the S-layer glycoprotein, in a series of H. volcanii strains deleted of genes putatively participating in N glycosylation, the involvement of two gene products in protein glycosylation, i.e., AglD and AglB, originally termed Alg5-A and Stt3, was demonstrated (2). AglD is involved in loading the final 162-Da sugar residue onto the pentasaccharide decorating at least two of the seven predicted sequons (Asn-X-Ser/Thr motifs, where X is any residue but Pro) of the H. volcanii S-layer glycoprotein. AglB, the sole component of the eukaryal oligosaccharide transferase complex thus far detected in any archaeal genome (1), is required for sugar-based modification of the same S-layer glycoprotein Asn residues. Deletion of either gene, moreover, affected S-layer structure and led to reduced cell growth as growth medium salt content increased, pointing to a role for this posttranslational modification in the ability of H. volcanii to thrive in hypersaline conditions (2).
In addition to containing genes encoding two Alg5 homologues, one of which corresponds to AglD (2), H. volcanii also encodes at least nine other putative glycosyltransferases. These include four homologues of eukaryal dolichol-phosphate mannosyl transferase 1 (Dpm1), responsible for loading activated mannose subunits onto dolichol carriers in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane (6), termed Dpm1-A through Dpm1-D in H. volcanii (1). In addition, H. volcanii also encodes a fifth Dpm-1 homologue, Hdpm-1, previously detected in Haloarcula marismortui (5) but not in eukaryal dpm-1 sequence-based homology searches of H. volcanii (1). While the genes encoding these putative H. volcanii glycosyltransferases are transcribed (1), suggesting that all encode expressed proteins, their substrate specificities and, indeed, their participation in N glycosylation, remains to be proven. Toward this end, we have generated glycosyltransferase-deleted H. volcanii strains to assess the roles of the absent proteins in the N glycosylation of the S-layer glycoprotein.
In the research reported here, we have focused on the role played by the product of the dpm1-B gene, given that dpm1-B is located only eight open reading frames upstream from aglB (http://archaea.ucsc.edu), previously shown to participate in H. volcanii N glycosylation (2). Moreover, both dpm1-B and aglB present similar transcription patterns (1). The results show that although it is not essential for H. volcanii viability, Dpm1-B is indeed involved in glycosylation of the reporter S-layer glycoprotein, participating in adding the fourth subunit of the pentasaccharide decorating at least two Asn residues of the protein. Thus, adopting the terminology of Chaban et al. (7), we rename dpm1-B as aglE. Finally, topology studies involving a AglE-based chimera point to AglE being a membrane-spanning protein with an inwardly oriented N terminus, suggesting the active site of AglE to lie on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane.
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Gene deletion.
To test the essential nature of H. volcanii dpm1-B, the gene was deleted as previously described (1). The primers used to amplify regions of
500 bp in length flanking the dpm1-B coding sequence are as follows: forward upstream flanking region primer (forup), gggctcgagGACTTGTTGAGTGCTACGAG; reverse upstream flanking region primer (revup), cccaagcttGTAGGTGATAGTATCCCAAG; forward downstream flanking region primer (fordwn), gggggatccCCTCTCTTTCTGACATTCTTG; and reverse downstream flanking region primer (revdwn), ccctctagaGTCCTCCAGAGGCCGCAAAC. In each primer sequence, the genomic DNA sequences are in capital letters, and the introduced restriction sites, including three guanine or cytosine residues, are in lowercase letters. XhoI and HindIII sites were introduced in the forup and fordwn sequences, respectively, while BamHI and XbaI sites were introduced in the fordwn and revdwn sequences, respectively.
Mass spectrometry (MS). For in-gel tryptic digestion of the H. volcanii S-layer glycoprotein from cells of the WR536 background strain, or the same strain depleted of dpm1-B (or aglE, see below), samples were run on 10% precast gels (Invitrogen, Paisley, United Kingdom) and stained with Novex colloidal blue stain (Invitrogen). The bands of interest were excised, destained in 400 µl of 50% (vol/vol) acetonitrile in 0.1 M ammonium bicarbonate (pH 8.4), and dried by using a SpeedVac drying apparatus. The gel slices were rehydrated in 20 µl of trypsin working solution (Promega sequencing grade modified trypsin, prepared according to the manufacturer's instructions) and incubated at 37°C overnight. The supernatant was removed, and digestion was terminated by the addition of 50 µl of 0.1% (vol/vol) trifluoroacetic acid (10 min, 37°C). The supernatant was removed, and the peptides were further extracted with 200 µl of 60% (vol/vol) acetonitrile-0.1% (vol/vol) trifluoroacetic acid (15 min, 37°C). The supernatant was again removed and pooled with the previous supernatant. Both extraction steps were then repeated, and the supernatants were pooled. The volume of the combined supernatants was subsequently concentrated by using a SpeedVac drying apparatus.
For offline liquid chromatography matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF)/TOF-MS analysis, protease-generated peptides were separated by using the Ultimate 3000 LC system (Dionex, Sunnyvale CA), fitted with a Pepmap analytical C-18 nanocapillary (75-µm internal diameter by 15-cm length; Dionex) analytical column. An aliquot of the digest was loaded onto the column and eluted by using solvent A (0.1% [vol/vol] trifluoroacetic acid in 2% [vol/vol] acetonitrile) and solvent B (0.1% [vol/vol] trifluoroacetic acid in 90% [vol/vol] acetonitrile) in the following gradient: 0 to 60% solvent B (0 to 36 min), 60 to 90% solvent B (36 to 37 min), 90% solvent B (37 to 40 min), and 100% solvent A (40 to 41 min) at a flow rate of 0.300 nl/min. The eluant was mixed directly with the
-cyano-hydroxy cinnamic acid matrix and spotted onto a metal MALDI target plate. MALDI-TOF/TOF-MS was performed by using an Applied Biosystems 4800 mass spectrometer in positive reflectron mode, set for delayed extraction. Tandem MS (MS/MS) was performed with the collision-induced dissociation (CID) setting turned on. Sequazyme peptide mass standards served as external calibrants.
Construction of a CBD-Dpm1-B chimera. The dpm1-B gene was amplified from H. volcanii strain WR536 genomic DNA using primers (forward primer, gggcatATGACTTCGACTCTACCGTTTG; reverse primer, cccggtaccTCATTGTTCCTCCGATCTTAGG) designed to introduce NdeI and KpnI restriction sites (lowercase letters) on each side of the dpm1-B coding region (capital letters) and ligated into the pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega). The dpm1-B gene was then excised upon digestion with NdeI and KpnI and inserted into the pWL-CBD vector (13), also digested with the same restriction enzymes, resulting in DNA encoding the Clostridium thermocellum cellulosome cellulose-binding domain (CBD) fused to the 5' end of the Dpm1-B-encoding gene.
Subcellular fractionation and urea treatment of H. volcanii cells. H. volcanii cells (1 ml) were broken by sonication (2 s on and 1 s off for 90 s, 35% output; Misonix XL2020 ultrasonicator) and centrifuged at 196,000 x g for 13 min at 4°C in an ultracentrifuge (Sorvall M120). While 200 µl of the supernatant was precipitated in 15% (wt/vol) trichloroacetic acid (TCA), the pelleted membrane fraction was resuspended in 200 µl of distilled water and precipitated in 15% (wt/vol) TCA. For urea treatment, designed to distinguish between peripheral and integral membrane proteins, the pelleted membrane fraction was resuspended in 300 µl of 6 M urea in 2 M NaCl-50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.2), followed by incubation at room temperature for 15 min. Subsequently, the mixture was overlain onto 700 µl of a 40% (wt/vol) sucrose cushion in 2 M NaCl-50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.2) and centrifuged for 75 min at 196,000 x g and 4°C. The membrane-containing pellet was resuspended in 200 µl of distilled water, and proteins were precipitated in 15% (wt/vol) TCA. All TCA-precipitated samples were washed with ice-cold acetone, resuspended in sample buffer, and resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-12% (wt/vol) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-12% PAGE).
Immunoblotting. Proteins were electrotransferred from SDS-PAGE gels to nitrocellulose membranes (0.45-µm pore size; Schleicher & Schuell, Dassel, Germany) and incubated with primary and secondary antibodies at the following dilutions: polyclonal rabbit anti-CBD antibodies (obtained from Ed Bayer, Weizmann Institute of Science or Yuval Shoham, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology) were used at a 1:10,000 dilution, while polyclonal rabbit anti-S-layer glycoprotein (10) and anti-SRP54 (25) antibodies were diluted 1:1,000. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibodies (Bio-Rad), serving as secondary antibodies, were used at a 1:2,000 dilution. Detection was achieved by using the ECL Western blotting detection reagent (Amersham Biosciences, United Kingdom).
GenBank accession number. The sequence of H. volcanii dpm1-B (listed as aglE, see below) has been deposited into the EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ databases and assigned accession number AM888352.
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The dpm1-B gene (or aglE [see below]) encodes a predicted 33.8-kDa protein and includes a glycosyltransferase 2 domain (PF00535), spanning residues 9 to 173, much like murine Dpm1, which contains the same domain, spanning residues 28 to 199 (Fig. 1). Outside these regions, the two protein sequences show little homology. This, together with documented difficulty in predicting protein function from amino acid sequence alone (8) and the broad range of functions attributed to proteins comprising the Pfam PF00535 family (pfam.sanger.ac.uk/family?acc = PF00535), suggests that H. volcanii Dpm1-B and its eukaryal homologues may not carry out the same functions. Nonetheless, sequence analysis reveals that H. volcanii Dpm1-B belongs to a universal protein family, whose members are found in Archaea, Eukarya, and Bacteria.
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FIG. 1. H. volcanii Dpm1-B (AglE) is a homologue of eukaryal Dpm1. The deduced amino acid sequence of H. volcanii Dpm1-B (AglE) was aligned with the sequence of the Mus musculus Dpm1 protein (NP_034202.1). Identical amino acids are in black boxes, while similar amino acids are shaded gray.
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FIG. 2. Deletion of the dpm1-B (aglE) gene does not affect cell viability. (A) Left panel: PCR amplification was performed by using a forward primer directed at the 5' dpm1-B flanking region and a reverse primer directed at a sequence within the dpm1-B coding region (lanes 1a, 2a, and 3a) or a sequence within the trpA sequence (lanes 1b, 2b, and 3b), together with genomic DNA from cells of the WR536 background strain (bkgnd, lanes 1a and 1b), from plasmid-incorporating cells (pop-in, lanes 2a and 2b) or from cells that had replaced the dpm1-B gene (pop-out, lanes 3a and 3b), as a template. For the left panel, PCR amplification was performed with primers directed against the dpm1-B coding region together with genomic DNA from cells of the WR536 background strain (bkgnd) or the dpm1-B-deleted strain (deletion). (B) RT-PCR was performed with primers directed at dpm1-B (upper panel) or sec11b (lower panel) and genomic DNA from WR536 background cells or cDNA or RNA from cells with dpm1-B deleted as a template.
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To determine whether Dpm1-B plays a role in H. volcanii N glycosylation, cells with the encoding gene deleted were examined by MS to assess the glycosylation pattern of the S-layer glycoprotein. Recent work (2) has shown the N-linked glycan decorating at least two sequons of the H. volcanii S-layer glycoprotein to be a pentasaccharide comprising two 162-Da residues, two 176-Da residues, and a single 190-Da moiety, with the two 176-Da moieties most likely corresponding to hexuronic acids and the 190-Da entity likely being a dimethylated hexose or a methyl ester of a hexuronic acid. In agreement with these earlier studies, MS analysis of the Asn13-containing, S-layer glycoprotein-derived tryptic peptide isolated from cells of the WR536 background strain revealed the presence of penta-, tetra-, tri-, di-, and monosaccharide-modified peptide peaks (Fig. 3, upper panel). In contrast, examination of the N-linked glycosylation pattern of the same S-layer glycoprotein-derived peptide isolated from cells with dpm1-B (or aglE [see below]) deleted revealed the presence of only peaks corresponding to the mono-, di-, and trisaccharide-modified peptides (Fig. 3, lower panel). Peaks corresponding to tetra- and pentasaccharide-modified peptides were completely absent. As such, it appears that Dpm1-B is involved in the addition of the 190-Da saccharide found at position 4 of the pentasaccharide. Hence, given its demonstrated role in N glycosylation, Dpm1B was renamed AglE (for archaeal glycosylation protein E), in accordance with the nomenclature proposed by Chaban et al. (7).
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FIG. 3. MALDI-TOF analysis of an Asn-13-containing, H. volcanii S-layer glycoprotein-derived glycopeptide. The MALDI-TOF spectra of the Asn-13-containing tryptic peptides derived from the S-layer glycoprotein of the WR536 background (upper panel) and dpm1-B (aglE)-deleted strains (lower panel) are shown. The components of the glycopeptide-associated sugar residues are shown in the inset box, while the glycan moieties decorating the peptide peaks are marked on the MALDI-TOF spectra, accordingly.
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Topology of an H. volcanii AglE-based chimera. Like its other mammalian counterparts, murine dolichol-phosphate mannosyltransferase exists as a complex, comprising the catalytically active Dpm1 subunit together with the regulatory Dpm2 and stabilizing Dpm3 subunits (21). BLAST-based searches of the H. volcanii genome, however, only detected homologues to the mammalian Dpm1 subunit. Thus, given the apparent absence of the membrane association-mediating Dpm3 subunit (4), the subcellular localization of H. volcanii AglE is unclear.
To experimentally consider both the subcellular localization and the topology of AglE, a chimera was constructed between the C. thermocellum cellulosome CBD and AglE. Accordingly, H. volcanii cells were transformed to express DNA encoding the CBD moiety fused to the predicted N terminus of AglE. Expression of the CBD-AglE chimera was confirmed by immunoblot analysis of crude cell extracts using antibodies directed against the CBD moiety. This revealed the presence of a 52-kDa band, corresponding to the combined apparent molecular masses of the 33.8-kDa AglE and the 18.4-kDa CBD moieties (Fig. 4A). No such band could be detected in the untransformed strain WR536 background cells.
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FIG. 4. Expression and topology of the CBD-AglE construct. (A) The protein contents of cells of the WR536 background strain or the same cells expressing CBD-AglE were precipitated, separated by SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted with antibodies directed against the cellulose-binding domain. The positions of molecular mass markers are shown on the right. (B) H. volcanii cells expressing CBD-AglE were broken by sonication, membrane and supernatant fractions were obtained by ultracentrifugation, and the different fractions were immunoblotted with antibodies to the S-layer glycoprotein (SLG), SRP54 or CBD. Membrane fractions treated with 6 M urea and ultracentrifuged through a 40% sucrose cushion are shown in the right lanes of each panel. The same treatments were performed with H. volcanii cells expressing the soluble CBD moiety alone (bottom panel). (C) H. volcanii cells (1 ml) expressing CBD-AglE were subjected to proteolysis with 1 mg of proteinase K/ml at 55°C. Aliquots (100 µl) were removed every 30 min, TCA (15%) precipitated, separated by SDS-12% PAGE, and either Coomassie-stained (S-layer glycoprotein, upper panel) or immunoblotted with antibodies to SRP54 (middle panel) or CBD (lower panel) at the concentrations given in Materials and Methods. Antibody binding was detected by enhanced chemiluminescence.
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To ascertain whether AglE is integrally or peripherally associated with the cell membrane, membrane fractions were treated with 6 M urea to disrupt noncovalent protein associations. The urea-treated membrane fraction was then collected by centrifugation through a 40% (wt/vol) sucrose cushion. After such treatment (Fig. 4B), the S-layer glycoprotein remained associated with the membrane fraction, while that minor pool of SRP54 bound to the membrane (12, 19) was released into the soluble fraction. Like the S-layer glycoprotein, CBD-AglE was clearly detectable in the urea-treated membrane fraction, confirming AglE to be a membrane-spanning protein.
Efforts next addressed whether the N terminus of CBD-AglE is cytoplasmically or outwardly oriented. Accordingly, cells expressing CBD-AglE were subjected to proteolytic digestion with proteinase K at 55°C. Aliquots of the digested cells were removed every half hour over the course of 4 h, TCA precipitated, and separated by SDS-PAGE. While the S-layer glycoprotein was digested from the earliest time point and could be hardly detected after 3 h of digestion, SRP54, an intracellular marker, remained at a constant level throughout the 4-h digestion. Thus, under the conditions used, only proteins exposed at the cell surface were digested (Fig. 4C). Like SRP54, CBD-AglE was detected at a constant level throughout the period of proteolysis, implying the N terminus of the fusion construct to be cytoplasmically oriented. When, however, proteinase K digestion was performed in the presence of 1% (vol/vol) Triton X-100, thereby disrupting cell integrity, no CBD-AglE survived past the 30-min mark, confirming the ability of the protease to digest CBD-AglE, given the opportunity (not shown).
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Presently, the precise role assumed by AglE in the N-glycosylation process remains unknown. AglE shows similarity to eukaryal Dpm1, responsible for the addition of GDP-mannose to dolichol pyrophosphate to yield phosphodolichol mannose (15). The glycosyltransferase 2 domain (PF00535) of AglE is also found in enzymes responsible for transferring nucleotide-activated sugars to carriers (such as phosphodolichol) but not in glycosyltransferases that add sugar substrates to the growing lipid-linked oligosaccharide involved in N glycosylation. Therefore, AglE may be responsible for loading the 190-Da sugar subunit of the H. volcanii S-layer glycoprotein-modifying pentasaccharide onto a lipid carrier, from where it is then presumably transferred onto the 176-Da sugar species of the three-membered pentasaccharide precursor via the actions of a distinct transferase. On the other hand, it cannot yet be ruled out that AglE directly adds the 190-Da sugar subunit to the growing oligosaccharide. Indeed, genome searches have failed to identify any H. volcanii homologues of the eukaryal glycosyltransferases responsible for the transfer of phosphodolichol-linked sugar residues to the growing polysaccharide destined to decorate select Asn residues of the target protein, such as Alg3, Alg8, Alg9, Alg10, or Alg12 (6). The future development of in vitro assays will help in determining the true role of AglE in H. volcanii N glycosylation.
Unlike what was observed with cells lacking AglB or AglD (2), cells in which AglE was absent did not show any difference in cell growth in any of the tested conditions, in S-layer glycoprotein release, or in proteolytic susceptibility of the S-layer, relative to cells of the WR536 background strain. These earlier studies showed, however, that the extent of the perturbation of the S-layer glycoprotein glycan moiety, as realized upon deletion of either glycan-processing gene, did not necessarily correlate with an effect on the S-layer glycoprotein stability or H. volcanii cell behavior. In other words, the most pronounced shift in apparent molecular mass of the S-layer glycoprotein protein, as well as the biggest differences in S-layer architecture and protease susceptibility, could be observed with the aglD deletion strain, where only the final 162-Da sugar residue of the N-linked pentasaccharide is missing. In contrast, H. volcanii cells missing AglB, and thus lacking the entire N-linked pentasaccharide, showed less-pronounced differences relative to the WR536 background strain. The absence of the last two sugar subunits of the N-linked glycan entity decorating the S-layer glycoprotein in the aglE deletion strain, namely, the outermost 162-Da residue and the 190-Da residue found at position 4, yields cells phenotypically identical to those of the WR536 background strain. In contrast, deleting the final 162-Da saccharide alone drastically changes S-layer structure and behavior. As such, the relative importance of these sugar residues to the N-linked pentasaccharide is implied. One can thus speculate that the 162-Da sugar subunit plays a critical role in stabilizing the S-layer glycan structure, since its absence results in a less stable form of the S layer, possibly due to the exposure of a charged group on the oligosaccharide backbone. This, in turn, may explain why the unmasking of the 190-Da sugar residue but not its removal has such an impact on the cell. Efforts to identify the 162-, 190-. and 176-Da sugar species comprising the pentasaccharide decorating the S-layer glycoprotein are ongoing.
Finally, through the use of a chimeric CBD-AglE reporter, the present study predicts AglE to be a membrane-spanning protein with a cytoplasmically oriented N terminus. Although it can be argued that the 18-kDa CBD moiety fused to the N terminus of AglE inadvertently influenced the topology of CBD-AglE, bioinformatics analysis of the amino acid sequence of AglE with Signal-P (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP), which is software designed to detect the existence of signal peptides, failed to predict the presence of an N-terminal signal sequence in AglE that would have been masked by the N-terminally fused CBD moiety, thereby rendering topological perturbation of AglE by the fused CBD moiety unlikely. Given that AglE is predicted to be a membrane-spanning protein with a cytoplasmically oriented N terminus, the PF00535 glycosyltransferase 2 domain (residues 9 to 173), likely comprising the active site of AglE, would face the cytoplasm. In contrast, the active site of the archaeal oligosaccharide transferase was described as being outwardly oriented, since externally added sequon-containing non-membrane-permeating peptides were glycosylated by H. salinarum cells (18). Therefore, it appears that as in Eukarya and Bacteria, the N-glycosylation process in H. volcanii, and likely other Archaea, can also be divided into two parts. The assembly of a lipid-linked oligosaccharide (16) likely transpires on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane, while the transfer of the glycan moiety to its target seemingly occurs on the external side of the membrane. It remains, however, to be determined whether transfer of the completed glycan to the target protein takes place after reorientation of the oligosaccharide to the external surface of the plasma membrane, as in the bacterium Campylobacter jejuni (20), or whether, as in higher eukaryotes (6), additional sugar residues are added to the lipid-linked glycan after its "flipping" across the membrane, prior to its transfer to target Asn residues.
Published ahead of print on 29 February 2008. ![]()
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