A proactive role of water molecules in acceptor recognition by protein O-fucosyltransferase 2.
Jessika Valero-GonzálezChristina Leonhard-MeliefErandi Lira-NavarreteGonzalo Jiménez-OsésCristina Hernández-RuizMaría Carmen PallarésInmaculada YruelaDeepika VasudevanAnabel LostaoFrancisco CorzanaHideyuki TakeuchiRobert S HaltiwangerRamon Hurtado-GuerreroPublished in: Nature chemical biology (2016)
Protein O-fucosyltransferase 2 (POFUT2) is an essential enzyme that fucosylates serine and threonine residues of folded thrombospondin type 1 repeats (TSRs). To date, the mechanism by which this enzyme recognizes very dissimilar TSRs has been unclear. By engineering a fusion protein, we report the crystal structure of Caenorhabditis elegans POFUT2 (CePOFUT2) in complex with GDP and human TSR1 that suggests an inverting mechanism for fucose transfer assisted by a catalytic base and shows that nearly half of the TSR1 is embraced by CePOFUT2. A small number of direct interactions and a large network of water molecules maintain the complex. Site-directed mutagenesis demonstrates that POFUT2 fucosylates threonine preferentially over serine and relies on folded TSRs containing the minimal consensus sequence C-X-X-S/T-C. Crystallographic and mutagenesis data, together with atomic-level simulations, uncover a binding mechanism by which POFUT2 promiscuously recognizes the structural fingerprint of poorly homologous TSRs through a dynamic network of water-mediated interactions.