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Title: Functional characterization of MigA and WapR: putative rhamnosyltransferases involved in outer core oligosaccharide biosynthesis of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Author: Poon KK, Westman EL, Vinogradov E, Jin S, Lam JS. Journal: J Bacteriol; 2008 Mar; 190(6):1857-65. PubMed ID: 18178733. Abstract: Pseudomonas aeruginosa lipopolysaccharide (LPS) contains two glycoforms of core oligosaccharide (OS); one form is capped with O antigen through an alpha-1,3-linked L-rhamnose (L-Rha), while the other is uncapped and contains an alpha-1,6-linked L-Rha. Two genes in strain PAO1, wapR (PA5000) and migA (PA0705), encode putative glycosyltransferases associated with core biosynthesis. We propose that WapR and MigA are the rhamnosyltransferases responsible for the two linkages of L-Rha to the core. Knockout mutants with mutations in both genes were generated. The wapR mutant produced LPS lacking O antigen, and addition of wapR in trans complemented this defect. The migA mutant produced LPS with a truncated outer core and showed no reactivity to outer core-specific monoclonal antibody (MAb) 5C101. Complementation of this mutant with migA restored reactivity of the LPS to MAb 5C101. Interestingly, LPS from the complemented migA strain was not reactive to MAb 18-19 (specific for the core-plus-one O repeat). This was due to overexpression of MigA in the complemented strain that caused an increase in the proportion of the uncapped core OS, thereby decreasing the amount of the core-plus-one O repeat, indicating that MigA has a regulatory role. The structures of LPS from both mutants were elucidated using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The capped core of the wapR mutant was found to be truncated and lacked alpha-1,3-L-Rha. In contrast, uncapped core OS from the migA mutant lacked alpha-1,6-L-Rha. These results provide evidence that WapR is the alpha-1,3-rhamnosyltransferase, while MigA is the alpha-1,6-rhamnosyltransferase.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]