Elucidation of the glycan structure of the b-type flagellin of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1

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Abstract

Flagella are essential for motility and pathogenicity in many bacteria. The main component of the flagellar filament, flagellin, often undergoes post-translational modifications, with glycosylation being a common occurrence. In Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1, the b-type flagellin is O -glycosylated with a structure that includes a rhamnose, a phospho-group and a previous unknown moiety. This structure resembles the well-characterized glycan (Type A) in Clostridioides difficile strain 630, which features an N -acetylglucosamine linked to an N -methylthreonine via a phosphodiester bond.

This study aimed to characterize the b-type glycan structure in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 using a set of mass spectrometry experiments. For this purpose, we used wildtype P. aeruginosa PAO1 and several gene mutants from the b-type glycan biosynthetic cluster. Moreover, we compared the mass spectrometry characteristics of the b-type glycan with those of in vitro modified Type A-peptides from C. difficile strain 630Δ erm .

Our results demonstrate that the thus far unknown moiety of the b-type glycan in P. aeruginosa consists of an N,N -dimethylthreonine. These data allowed us to refine our model of the flagellin glycan biosynthetic pathway in both P. aeruginosa PAO1 and C. difficile strain 630.

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