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Expanding substrate specificity of GT-B fold glycosyltransferase via domain swapping and high-throughput screening Supplementary material Sung-Hee Park1, Hyung-Yeon Park2, Jae Kyung Sohng3, Hee Chan Lee3, Kwangkyoung Liou3, Yeo Joon Yoon 4, Byung-Gee Kim1, 5,* 1 Institute of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Interdisciplinary Program for Bioengineering, Seoul National University, Sillim-dong, Gwanak-gu, Seoul 151-742, Korea, 2 Department of Chemistry, Inha University, Incheon 402-751, Korea, 3 Institute of Biomolecule Reconstruction, SunMoon University, Chungnam 336-708, Korea, 4 Division of Nano Sciences, Ewha Womans University, 11-1, Daehyun-dong, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul 120-750, Korea, 5 Institute of Bio Engineering, School of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Seoul National University, Sillim-dong, Gwanak-gu, Seoul 151-742, Korea. Phone) +82-2-880-6774, Fax) +82-2-876-8945, E-mail) [email protected] S1 Protein Modeling of HMT31 Homology modeling technique allows us to predict 3-D structure of a protein and to identify key residues surrounding the active site pocket. The primary requirement in constructing structural model of HMT31 is to select a proper template structure from sequence alignment. To identify suitable parent standard structure for docking, we used the FUGUE (Shi et al. 2001) sequence-structure homology recognition program. The alignments produced by FUGUE for the highest-scoring hits were formatted with JOY (Mizuguchi et al. 1998) and analyzed visually to highlight the conservation of structurally important residues. Profile-profile matching between the target sequence and the HOMSTRAD database (Montalvao et al. 2005) was conducted for homology recognition and alignments. The highest-scoring hit was glycogen synthase (AGt) (PDB codes = 1rzu) (Buschiazzo et al. 2004) and Z-score was 4.24 (ID % = 16.2). The model was constructed based on the 1rzu with ORCHESTRA (Schrauber et al. 1993) based on the result of FUGUE. The determined model structure was validated by PROTABLE (Mannhold et al. 1995) and visual inspection was performed in parallel by using 3-D graphics software. The initial model was energyminimized by the conjugate gradient method until energy gradient norm converged to 0.01 kcal/mol. Minimized enzyme structure and its binding site identified by SITEID (SYBYL, Tripos Inc.). Catalytic key residues and linker sequences of HMT31 S2 The linker loop sequence and catalytic key residues for domain swapping of the GT-B fold enzyme were determined via protein modeling and ligand docking. The secondary structurebased alignment between AGT (PDB codes = 1rzu) (Buschiazzo et al. 2004) and HMT31 was performed to predict the secondary- and tertiary structure of HMT31. The structure of HMT31 belonged to the typical GT-B (Coutinho et al. 2003) fold. The modeling result showed that the linker sequence 210FVGRIAHEKGWRHANNQSAYRRYGEPLNSRR240. of The HMT31 was 210FVGRIAHEKGWRHA223 and 224NNQSAYRRYGEPLNSRR240 sequences were from KanF and GtfE, respectively. The ligand docking study showed that Asp35, Asn38, Arg141, His374, Gly378 and Gln399 were key catalytic residue of HMT31. Multiple alignments result of HMT31 and Gtfs (GtfA, B, C, D and E) which were well known GT-B fold enzymes involved in vancomycin related antibiotics is shown in the Figure S9. The Asp35 of HMT31 was matched with the Asp13 as a catalytic general base in GtfA (Mulichak et al. 2003), which is the GT in chloroeremomycin biosynthetic pathway. The Arg141 of HMT31 was conserved in the hyper-variable loop region (Mulichak et al. 2001). The loop region participates in the formation of an acceptor binding pocket like that observed in the N-terminal domains of Gtfs. His374 and Gly378 constructed the “HHXXAGT” loop (Hu and Walker 2002), which is a highly conserved Gly-rich sequence and a representative binding site of -phosphate of the NDP-sugar donor in GtfA (Mulichak et al. 2003). The S3 Gln399 is located in the loop region of the // motif (Hu and Walker 2002), constituting a large part of the donor binding site in the GT-B fold structure, which comprises GtfB (Mulichak et al. 2001), GtfA (Mulichak et al. 2003) and MurG (Hu et al. 2003). S4 Color Assay Procedure. Figure S1. Schematic representation of color assay screening method for glycosyltransferase. (a) Bacterial colonies expressing glycosyltransferase on a LB plate containing IPTG (0.01 mM) and cresol red (0.05 mM), (b) Bacterial colonies on a replica filter paper, (c) Incubation of the replica filter paper in a cresol red dipping solution containing acceptor and donor substrate, (d) Color change observation of active glycosylated colonies (Yellow). S5 Library construction. Figure S2. Lane 1: Size marker; Lane 2: Parental vector digested with HindIII; 3: Size distribution of library after ExoIII and Mungbean nuclease treatment. S6 Whole-cell color change. Figure S3. pH color assay result for bacterial streaks. (upper) Yellow color of the KE chimera harboring E. coli BL21, (lower) Red color of the negative control, pET28a vector harboring E. coli BL21. S7 MS analysis of mono-glucosylated 2-DOS. Figure S4. ESI-MS spectrum for the glucosylation of 2-DOS catalyzed by HMT31. 2deoxystreptamine (2-DOS) is found at m/z 163.15 [M + H]+ and mono-glucosylated 2DOS is found at m/z 325.00 [M + H]+ and at 347.04 [M + Na]+ respectively. S8 Figure S5. (a) Calibration curve: relationship between proton concentration and absorbance at 436 nm. (b) Reaction velocity of HMT31. The kinetic parameters for the HMT31 were determined on varied acceptor as 2-deoxystreptamine (2-DOS) and fixed donor 10mM dTDP-glucose. S9 Figure S6. Spectrometric data of HMT31 reaction toward NDP-sugars and 2-DOS, based on pH sensitive assay. S10 Figure S7. Sequence alignment of target #31 and the hit template AGT (PDB code = 1RZU) chosen from FUGUE. -helix and β-sheet are labeled a and b, respectively. S11 Figure S8. Structure and active pocket of HMT31. (a) A ribbon representation of HMT31 highlights the Rossmann-like fold in each domain as well as the location of TDP binding. (b) Schematic representation showing the interaction between HMT31 residues and TDP. Observed hydrogen bonding and ionic interactions are depicted with dashed lines indicating the distances. S12 Figure S9. Multiple alignment result of #31 and Gtfs. GtfA, GtfB and GtfC: chloroeremomycin biosynthetic pathway; GtfD and GtfE: vancomycin pathway. S13 References SYBYL molecular modeling software. 1699 South Hanley Rd, Suite 303, St. Louis, MO 63144: Tripos Inc. Buschiazzo A, Ugalde JE, Guerin ME, Shepard W, Ugalde RA, Alzari PM. 2004. Crystal structure of glycogen synthase: homologous enzymes catalyze glycogen synthesis and degradation. Embo J 23(16):3196-205. Coutinho PM, Deleury E, Davies GJ, Henrissat B. 2003. An evolving hierarchical family classification for glycosyltransferases. J Mol Biol 328(2):307-17. Hu Y, Chen L, Ha S, Gross B, Falcone B, Walker D, Mokhtarzadeh M, Walker S. 2003. Crystal structure of the MurG:UDP-GlcNAc complex reveals common structural principles of a superfamily of glycosyltransferases. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100(3):845-9. Hu Y, Walker S. 2002. Remarkable structural similarities between diverse glycosyltransferases. Chem Biol 9(12):1287-96. Mannhold R, Rekker RF, Sonntag C, ter Laak AM, Dross K, Polymeropoulos EE. 1995. Comparative evaluation of the predictive power of calculation procedures for molecular lipophilicity. J Pharm Sci 84(12):1410-9. Mizuguchi K, Deane CM, Blundell TL, Johnson MS, Overington JP. 1998. JOY: protein sequence-structure representation and analysis. Bioinformatics 14(7):617-23. Montalvao RW, Smith RE, Lovell SC, Blundell TL. 2005. CHORAL: a differential geometry approach to the prediction of the cores of protein structures. Bioinformatics 21(19):3719-25. Mulichak AM, Losey HC, Lu W, Wawrzak Z, Walsh CT, Garavito RM. 2003. Structure of the TDP-epi-vancosaminyltransferase GtfA from the chloroeremomycin biosynthetic pathway. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100(16):9238-43. Mulichak AM, Losey HC, Walsh CT, Garavito RM. 2001. Structure of the UDPglucosyltransferase GtfB that modifies the heptapeptide aglycone in the biosynthesis of vancomycin group antibiotics. Structure 9(7):547-57. Schrauber H, Eisenhaber F, Argos P. 1993. Rotamers: to be or not to be? An analysis of amino acid side-chain conformations in globular proteins. J Mol Biol 230(2):592-612. Shi J, Blundell TL, Mizuguchi K. 2001. FUGUE: sequence-structure homology recognition using environment-specific substitution tables and structure-dependent gap penalties. J Mol Biol 310(1):243-57. S14