Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.53 (sialidase)
2,694 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sialidases (E.C.3.2.1.18) belong to a group of glycohydrolytic enzymes, widely distributed in nature, which remove sialic acid residues from glycoproteins and glycolipids. All of the sialidase so far characterized at the molecular level share an Asp block, repeated three to five times in the primary structure, and an F/YRIP sequence motif which is part of the active site. Using a sequence homology-based approach, we previously identified a human gene, named NEU2, mapping to chromosome 2q37. NEU2 encoded protein is a polypeptide of 380 amino acids with two Asp block consensuses and the YRIP sequence in the amino terminal part of the primary structure. Here we demonstrate that NEU2 encodes a functional sialidase. NEU2 was expressed in COS7 cells, giving rise to a dramatic increase in the sialidase activity measured in cell extracts with the artificial substrate 4-MU-NANA. Using a rabbit polyclonal antiserum, on Western blots a protein band with a molecular weight of about 42 kDa was detectable, and its cytosolic localization was demonstrated with cell fractionation experiments. These results were confirmed using immunohistochemical techniques. NEU2 expression in E.coli cells allowed purification of the recombinant protein. As already observed in the enzyme expressed in COS7 cells, NEU2 pH optimum corresponds to 5.6 and the polypeptide showed a K(m)for 4-MU-NANA of 0.07 mM. In addition, based on the detectable similarities between the NEU2 amino acid sequence and bacterial sialidases, a prediction of the three-dimensional structure of the enzyme was carried out using a protein homology modeling approach.
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PMID:Expression of a novel human sialidase encoded by the NEU2 gene. 1056 56

Ganglioside sialidases have been implicated in neuronal differentiation processes, including neurite outgrowth. To understand further the roles and regulation mechanisms of the sialidase in neuronal systems, we have cloned mouse ganglioside sialidase cDNA and observed its expression in Neuro2a cell differentiation. A 3339-base pair cDNA, cloned based on the sequence information of previously cloned enzymes, encodes 418 amino acids containing three Asp boxes characteristic of sialidases. Northern blot analysis revealed a 3.4-kilobase transcript expressed highly in heart but also in several other tissues including brain. In situ hybridization of mouse brain demonstrated the mRNA to be present in the cerebral cortex, as well as in the granule cell layer, Purkinje cells, and deep cerebellar nucleus of the cerebellum. Transient expression of the cDNA in COS-1 cells resulted in over 300-fold increase in sialidase activity toward gangliosides compared with the control level, with a preference for ganglioside substrate. During 5-bromodeoxyuridine-induced Neuro2a cell differentiation, the expression of the sialidase was increased as assessed by activity assays and quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analyses. Stable transfection of the sialidase in Neuro2a cells resulted in accelerated neurite arborization following 5-bromodeoxyuridine treatment, indicating the direct participation of this ganglioside sialidase in neuronal cell differentiation.
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PMID:Molecular cloning of mouse ganglioside sialidase and its increased expression in Neuro2a cell differentiation. 1071 20

Several mammalian sialidases have been described so far, suggesting the existence of numerous polypeptides with different tissue distributions, subcellular localizations and substrate specificities. Among these enzymes, plasma-membrane-associated sialidase(s) have a pivotal role in modulating the ganglioside content of the lipid bilayer, suggesting their involvement in the complex mechanisms governing cell-surface biological functions. Here we describe the identification and expression of a human plasma-membrane-associated sialidase, NEU3, isolated starting from an expressed sequence tag (EST) clone. The cDNA for this sialidase encodes a 428-residue protein containing a putative transmembrane helix, a YRIP (single-letter amino acid codes) motif and three Asp boxes characteristic of sialidases. The polypeptide shows high sequence identity (78%) with the membrane-associated sialidase recently purified and cloned from Bos taurus. Northern blot analysis showed a wide pattern of expression of the gene, in both adult and fetal human tissues. Transient expression in COS7 cells permitted the detection of a sialidase activity with high activity towards ganglioside substrates at a pH optimum of 3.8. Immunofluorescence staining of the transfected COS7 cells demonstrated the protein's localization in the plasma membrane.
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PMID:Identification and expression of NEU3, a novel human sialidase associated to the plasma membrane. 1086 Dec 46

Human H3N2 influenza A viruses were known to preferentially bind to sialic acid (SA) in alpha2,6Gal linkage on red blood cells (RBC). However, H3N2 viruses isolated in MDCK cells after 1992 did not agglutinate chicken RBC (CRBC). Experiments with point-mutated hemagglutinin (HA) of A/Aichi/51/92, one of these viruses, revealed that an amino acid change from Glu to Asp at position 190 (E190D) was responsible for the loss of ability to bind to CRBC. A/Aichi/51/92 did not agglutinate CRBC treated with alpha2, 3-sialidase, suggesting that SAalpha2,3Gal on CRBC might not inhibit the binding of the virus to SAalpha2,6Gal on CRBC. However, the virus agglutinated derivatized CRBC resialylated with SAalpha2, 6Galbeta1,4GlcNAc. These findings suggested that the E190D change might have rendered the HA able to distinguish sialyloligosaccharides on the derivatized CRBC containing the SAalpha2,6Galbeta1,4GlcNAc sequence from those on the native CRBC.
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PMID:Change in receptor-binding specificity of recent human influenza A viruses (H3N2): a single amino acid change in hemagglutinin altered its recognition of sialyloligosaccharides. 1111 81

Unlike microbial sialidases, mammalian sialidases possess strict substrate specificity, for example the human membrane-associated sialidase, which hydrolyzes only gangliosides. To cast light on the molecular basis of this narrow substrate preference, predicted active site amino-acid residues of the human membrane sialidase were altered by site-directed mutagenesis. When compared with the active site amino-acid residues proposed for Salmonella typhimurium sialidase, only five out of 13 residues were found to be different to the human enzyme, these being located upstream of the putative transmembrane region. Alteration of seven residues, including these five, was followed by transient expression of the mutant enzymes in COS-1 cells and characterization of their kinetic properties using various substrates. Substitution of glutamic acid (at position 51) by aspartic acid and of arginine (at position 114) by glutamine or alanine resulted in retention of good catalytic efficiency toward ganglioside substrates, whereas other substitutions caused a marked reduction. The mutant enzyme E51D exhibited an increase in hydrolytic activity towards GM2 as well as sialyllactose (which are poor substrates for the wild-type) with change to a lower Km and a higher Vmax. R114Q demonstrated a substrate specificity shift in the same direction as E51D, whereas R114A enhanced the preference for gangliosides GD3 and GD1a that are effectively hydrolyzed by the wild-type. The inhibition experiments using 2-deoxy-2,3-didehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid were consistent with the results in the alteration of substrate specificity. The findings suggest that putative active-site residues of the human membrane sialidase contribute to its substrate specificity.
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of human membrane-associated ganglioside sialidase: identification of amino-acid residues contributing to substrate specificity. 1129 36

Bacterial sialidases represent important colonization or virulence factors. The development of a rational basis for the design of antimicrobials targeted to sialidases requires the knowledge of the exact roles of their conserved amino acids. A recombinant enzyme of the 'small' (43 kDa) sialidase of Clostridium perfringens was used as a model in our study. Several conserved amino acids, identified by alignment of known sialidase sequences, were altered by site-directed mutagenesis. All recombinant enzymes were affinity-purified and the enzymatic characteristics were determined. Among the mutated enzymes with modifications in the environment of the 4-hydroxyl group of bound sialic acids, D54N and D54E exhibited minor changes in substrate binding. However, a reduced activity and changes in their pH curves indicate the importance of a charged group at this area. R56K, which is supposed to bind directly to sialic acids as in the homologous Salmonella typhimurium sialidase, showed a 2500-fold reduced activity. The amino acids Asp-62 and Asp-100 are probably involved in catalysis, indicated by reduced activities and altered temperature and pH curves of mutant enzymes. Exchanging Glu-230 with threonine or aspartic acid led to dramatic decreases in activity. This residue and Y347 are supposed to be crucial for providing a suitable environment for catalysis. However, unaltered pH curves of mutant sialidases exclude their direct involvement in protonation or deprotonation events. These results indicate that the interactions with the substrates vary in different sialidases and that they might be more complex than suggested by mere static X-ray structures.
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PMID:Elucidation of the role of functional amino acid residues of the small sialidase from Clostridium perfringens by site-directed mutagenesis. 1130 29

An antibody against a transition state analog (TSA) may share some common features with an enzyme that produces such a transition state. SIC172 antibody binds specifically to Neu2en5Ac, a TSA of Neu5Ac in the sialidase reaction, but has no catalytic activity. To understand how the antibody recognizes Neu2en5Ac and to find out if it is possible to convert it to a catalytic antibody, we made and sequenced the SIC172 ScFv, and constructed a 3-D model of it. The VH-CDR3 contains a unique sequence with Cys at H95. The 3-D model showed that Cys-H95 is exposed inside the antigen-binding cavity. After affinity docking, 4 types emerged. In type I, the carboxyl group of Neu2en5Ac is located near the Cys-H95 and neighboring positively charged residues. The change of Cys-H95 to Asp by site-directed mutation decreased the binding activity, while a change to Arg did not. These and other mutation experiments, and further modeling of mutant Fv, support the 3-D model and docking type I. A comparison with sialidase indicates that SIC172 antibody appears to have some groups of residues that are conserved at the active site of the enzyme. The possibility of Neu2en5Ac-binding antibody being converted to a catalytic antibody is discussed.
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PMID:Computational 3-D modeling and site-directed mutation of an antibody that binds Neu2en5Ac, a transition state analogue of a sialic acid. 1174 76

Multiple-sequence alignment of glycoside hydrolase (GH) families 32, 43, 62, and 68 revealed three conserved blocks, each containing an acidic residue at an equivalent position in all the enzymes. A detailed analysis of the site-directed mutations so far performed on invertases (GH32), arabinanases (GH43), and bacterial fructosyltransferases (GH68) indicated a direct implication of the conserved residues Asp/Glu (block I), Asp (block II), and Glu (block III) in substrate binding and hydrolysis. These residues are close in space in the 5-bladed beta-propeller fold determined for Cellvibrio japonicus alpha-L-arabinanase Arb43A [Nurizzo et al., Nat Struct Biol 2002;9:665-668] and Bacillus subtilis endo-1,5-alpha-L-arabinanase. A sequence-structure compatibility search using 3D-PSSM, mGenTHREADER, INBGU, and SAM-T02 programs predicted indistinctly the 5-bladed beta-propeller fold of Arb43A and the 6-bladed beta-propeller fold of sialidase/neuraminidase (GH33, GH34, and GH83) as the most reliable topologies for GH families 32, 62, and 68. We conclude that the identified acidic residues are located at the active site of a beta-propeller architecture in GH32, GH43, GH62, and GH68, operating with a canonical reaction mechanism of either inversion (GH43 and likely GH62) or retention (GH32 and GH68) of the anomeric configuration. Also, we propose that the beta-propeller architecture accommodates distinct binding sites for the acceptor saccharide in glycosyl transfer reaction.
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PMID:Three acidic residues are at the active site of a beta-propeller architecture in glycoside hydrolase families 32, 43, 62, and 68. 1474 91

Gangliosides play key roles in cell differentiation, cell-cell interactions, and transmembrane signaling. Sialidases hydrolyze sialic acids to produce asialo compounds, which is the first step of degradation processes of glycoproteins and gangliosides. Sialidase involvement has been implicated in some lysosomal storage disorders such as sialidosis and galactosialidosis. Neu2 is a recently identified human cytosolic sialidase. Here we report the first high resolution x-ray structures of mammalian sialidase, human Neu2, in its apo form and in complex with an inhibitor, 2-deoxy-2,3-dehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid (DANA). The structure shows the canonical six-blade beta-propeller observed in viral and bacterial sialidases with its active site in a shallow crevice. In the complex structure, the inhibitor lies in the catalytic crevice surrounded by ten amino acids. In particular, the arginine triad, conserved among sialidases, aids in the proper positioning of the carboxylate group of DANA within the active site region. The tyrosine residue, Tyr(334), conserved among mammalian and bacterial sialidases as well as in viral neuraminidases, facilitates the enzymatic reaction by stabilizing a putative carbonium ion in the transition state. The loops containing Glu(111) and the catalytic aspartate Asp(46) are disordered in the apo form but upon binding of DANA become ordered to adopt two short alpha-helices to cover the inhibitor, illustrating the dynamic nature of substrate recognition. The N-acetyl and glycerol moieties of DANA are recognized by Neu2 residues not shared by bacterial sialidases and viral neuraminidases, which can be regarded as a key structural difference for potential drug design against bacteria, influenza, and other viruses.
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PMID:Crystal structure of the human cytosolic sialidase Neu2. Evidence for the dynamic nature of substrate recognition. 1550 18

A recombinant D92G mutant sialidase from Micromonospora viridifaciens has been cloned, expressed and purified. Kinetic studies reveal that the replacement of the conserved aspartic acid with glycine results in a catalytically competent retaining sialidase that possesses significant activity against activated substrates. The contribution of this aspartate residue to the free energy of hydrolysis for natural substrates is greater than 19 kJ/mol. The three dimensional structure of the D92G mutant shows that the removal of aspartic acid 92 causes no significant re-arrangement of the active site, and that an ordered water molecule substitutes for the carboxylate group of D92.
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PMID:Contribution of the active site aspartic acid to catalysis in the bacterial neuraminidase from Micromonospora viridifaciens. 1552 97


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