Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.

Antibodies bind foreign antigens with high affinity and specificity leading to their neutralization and/or clearance by the immune system. The conserved N-glycan on IgG has significant impact on antibody effector function, with the endoglycosidases of Streptococcus pyogenes deglycosylating the IgG t...

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Main Authors: Asaminew H Aytenfisu, Daniel Deredge, Erik H Klontz, Jonathan Du, Eric J Sundberg, Alexander D MacKerell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-07-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009103
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spelling doaj-1c5a1fb3a1a0497cac4852104caef0b62021-08-14T04:31:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582021-07-01177e100910310.1371/journal.pcbi.1009103Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.Asaminew H AytenfisuDaniel DeredgeErik H KlontzJonathan DuEric J SundbergAlexander D MacKerellAntibodies bind foreign antigens with high affinity and specificity leading to their neutralization and/or clearance by the immune system. The conserved N-glycan on IgG has significant impact on antibody effector function, with the endoglycosidases of Streptococcus pyogenes deglycosylating the IgG to evade the immune system, a process catalyzed by the endoglycosidase EndoS2. Studies have shown that two of the four domains of EndoS2, the carbohydrate binding module (CBM) and the glycoside hydrolase (GH) domain are critical for catalytic activity. To yield structural insights into contributions of the CBM and the GH domains as well as the overall flexibility of EndoS2 to the proteins' catalytic activity, models of EndoS2-Fc complexes were generated through enhanced-sampling molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations and site-identification by ligand competitive saturation (SILCS) docking followed by reconstruction and multi-microsecond MD simulations. Modeling results predict that EndoS2 initially interacts with the IgG through its CBM followed by interactions with the GH yielding catalytically competent states. These may involve the CBM and GH of EndoS2 simultaneously interacting with either the same Fc CH2/CH3 domain or individually with the two Fc CH2/CH3 domains, with EndoS2 predicted to assume closed conformations in the former case and open conformations in the latter. Apo EndoS2 is predicted to sample both the open and closed states, suggesting that either complex can directly form following initial IgG-EndoS2 encounter. Interactions of the CBM and GH domains with the IgG are predicted to occur through both its glycan and protein regions. Simulations also predict that the Fc glycan can directly transfer from the CBM to the GH, facilitating formation of catalytically competent complexes and how the 734 to 751 loop on the CBM can facilitate extraction of the glycan away from the Fc CH2/CH3 domain. The predicted models are compared and consistent with Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange data. In addition, the complex models are consistent with the high specificity of EndoS2 for the glycans on IgG supporting the validity of the predicted models.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009103
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Asaminew H Aytenfisu
Daniel Deredge
Erik H Klontz
Jonathan Du
Eric J Sundberg
Alexander D MacKerell
spellingShingle Asaminew H Aytenfisu
Daniel Deredge
Erik H Klontz
Jonathan Du
Eric J Sundberg
Alexander D MacKerell
Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Asaminew H Aytenfisu
Daniel Deredge
Erik H Klontz
Jonathan Du
Eric J Sundberg
Alexander D MacKerell
author_sort Asaminew H Aytenfisu
title Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.
title_short Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.
title_full Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.
title_fullStr Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.
title_full_unstemmed Insights into substrate recognition and specificity for IgG by Endoglycosidase S2.
title_sort insights into substrate recognition and specificity for igg by endoglycosidase s2.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Antibodies bind foreign antigens with high affinity and specificity leading to their neutralization and/or clearance by the immune system. The conserved N-glycan on IgG has significant impact on antibody effector function, with the endoglycosidases of Streptococcus pyogenes deglycosylating the IgG to evade the immune system, a process catalyzed by the endoglycosidase EndoS2. Studies have shown that two of the four domains of EndoS2, the carbohydrate binding module (CBM) and the glycoside hydrolase (GH) domain are critical for catalytic activity. To yield structural insights into contributions of the CBM and the GH domains as well as the overall flexibility of EndoS2 to the proteins' catalytic activity, models of EndoS2-Fc complexes were generated through enhanced-sampling molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations and site-identification by ligand competitive saturation (SILCS) docking followed by reconstruction and multi-microsecond MD simulations. Modeling results predict that EndoS2 initially interacts with the IgG through its CBM followed by interactions with the GH yielding catalytically competent states. These may involve the CBM and GH of EndoS2 simultaneously interacting with either the same Fc CH2/CH3 domain or individually with the two Fc CH2/CH3 domains, with EndoS2 predicted to assume closed conformations in the former case and open conformations in the latter. Apo EndoS2 is predicted to sample both the open and closed states, suggesting that either complex can directly form following initial IgG-EndoS2 encounter. Interactions of the CBM and GH domains with the IgG are predicted to occur through both its glycan and protein regions. Simulations also predict that the Fc glycan can directly transfer from the CBM to the GH, facilitating formation of catalytically competent complexes and how the 734 to 751 loop on the CBM can facilitate extraction of the glycan away from the Fc CH2/CH3 domain. The predicted models are compared and consistent with Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange data. In addition, the complex models are consistent with the high specificity of EndoS2 for the glycans on IgG supporting the validity of the predicted models.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009103
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