Rhamnogalacturonan II is one of the most complex plant cell wall carbohydrates and is composed of 13 different sugars and 21 different glycosidic linkages. It is abundant in fruit and indulgence foods, such as chocolate and wine, making it common in the human diet. The human colonic commensal Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron expresses a consortium of 22 enzymes to metabolize rhamnogalacturonan II, some of which exclusively target sugars unique to rhamnogalacturonan II. Several of these enzyme families remain poorly described, and, consequently, our knowledge of rhamnogalacturonan II metabolism is limited. Chief among the poorly understood activities is glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 139, which targets α1,2-2O-methyl L-fucoside linkages, a sugar residue not found in any other plant cell wall complex glycans. Although the founding enzyme BT0984 was placed in the RG-II degradative pathway, no GH139 structure or catalytic blueprint had been available. We report the crystal structures of BT0984 and a second homolog revealing that the family operates with inverting stereochemistry. Using these data, we undertook a mutagenic strategy, backed by molecular dynamics, to identify the important substrate binding and catalytic residues, mapping these residues throughout the GH139 family revealing the importance of the O2 methyl interaction of the substrate. We propose a catalytic mechanism that uses a non-canonical Asn as a catalytic base and shares similarity with L-fucosidases/L-galactosidases of family GH95.
Keywordsglycoside hydrolase
plant cell wall
complex glycan
enzyme mechanism
enzyme structure
Abbreviations4NP-MEFUC4-nitrophenyl 2-O-methyl-α-L-fucoside
PGα1,4 poly-D-galacturonic
RG-IIrhamnogalacturonan II
© 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc on behalf of American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biologyé
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