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Self-recycling and partially conservative replication of mycobacterial methylmannose polysaccharides.

Ana MaranhaMafalda CostaJorge Ripoll-RozadaJosé António MansoVanessa MirandaVera M MendesBruno ManadasSandra Macedo-RibeiroM Rita VenturaPedro José Barbosa PereiraNuno Empadinhas
Published in: Communications biology (2023)
The steep increase in nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) infections makes understanding their unique physiology an urgent health priority. NTM synthesize two polysaccharides proposed to modulate fatty acid metabolism: the ubiquitous 6-O-methylglucose lipopolysaccharide, and the 3-O-methylmannose polysaccharide (MMP) so far detected in rapidly growing mycobacteria. The recent identification of a unique MMP methyltransferase implicated the adjacent genes in MMP biosynthesis. We report a wide distribution of this gene cluster in NTM, including slowly growing mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium avium, which we reveal to produce MMP. Using a combination of MMP purification and chemoenzymatic syntheses of intermediates, we identified the biosynthetic mechanism of MMP, relying on two enzymes that we characterized biochemically and structurally: a previously undescribed α-endomannosidase that hydrolyses MMP into defined-sized mannoligosaccharides that prime the elongation of new daughter MMP chains by a rare α-(1→4)-mannosyltransferase. Therefore, MMP biogenesis occurs through a partially conservative replication mechanism, whose disruption affected mycobacterial growth rate at low temperature.
Keyphrases
  • cell migration
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • genome wide
  • healthcare
  • fatty acid
  • public health
  • mental health
  • dna methylation
  • toll like receptor
  • immune response
  • inflammatory response
  • health information
  • water soluble