Crystal structure of the polysialic acid–degrading endosialidase of bacteriophage K1F

K Stummeyer, A Dickmanns, M M�hlenhoff…�- Nature structural &�…, 2005 - nature.com
K Stummeyer, A Dickmanns, M M�hlenhoff, R Gerardy-Schahn, R Ficner
Nature structural & molecular biology, 2005nature.com
Phages infecting the polysialic acid (polySia)-encapsulated human pathogen Escherichia
coli K1 are equipped with capsule-degrading tailspikes known as endosialidases, which are
the only identified enzymes that specifically degrade polySia. As polySia also promotes
cellular plasticity and tumor metastasis in vertebrates, endosialidases are widely applied in
polySia-related neurosciences and cancer research. Here we report the crystal structures of
endosialidase NF and its complex with oligomeric sialic acid. The structure NF, which�…
Abstract
Phages infecting the polysialic acid (polySia)-encapsulated human pathogen Escherichia coli K1 are equipped with capsule-degrading tailspikes known as endosialidases, which are the only identified enzymes that specifically degrade polySia. As polySia also promotes cellular plasticity and tumor metastasis in vertebrates, endosialidases are widely applied in polySia-related neurosciences and cancer research. Here we report the crystal structures of endosialidase NF and its complex with oligomeric sialic acid. The structure NF, which reveals three distinct domains, indicates that the unique polySia specificity evolved from a combination of structural elements characteristic of exosialidases and bacteriophage tailspike proteins. The endosialidase assembles into a catalytic trimer stabilized by a triple β-helix. Its active site differs markedly from that of exosialidases, indicating an endosialidase-specific substrate-binding mode and catalytic mechanism. Residues essential for endosialidase activity were identified by structure-based mutational analysis.
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