1. Academic Validation
  2. Glycan-metabolizing enzymes in microbe-host interactions: the Streptococcus pneumoniae paradigm

Glycan-metabolizing enzymes in microbe-host interactions: the Streptococcus pneumoniae paradigm

  • FEBS Lett. 2018 Dec;592(23):3865-3897. doi: 10.1002/1873-3468.13045.
Joanne K Hobbs 1 Benjamin Pluvinage 1 Alisdair B Boraston 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Abstract

Streptococcus pneumoniae is a frequent colonizer of the upper airways; however, it is also an accomplished pathogen capable of causing life-threatening diseases. To colonize and cause invasive disease, this bacterium relies on a complex array of factors to mediate the host-bacterium interaction. The respiratory tract is rich in functionally important glycoconjugates that display a vast range of glycans, and, thus, a key component of the pneumococcus-host interaction involves an arsenal of Bacterial carbohydrate-active Enzymes to depolymerize these glycans and carbohydrate transporters to import the products. Through the destruction of host glycans, the glycan-specific metabolic machinery deployed by S. pneumoniae plays a variety of roles in the host-pathogen interaction. Here, we review the processing and metabolism of the major host-derived glycans, including N- and O-linked glycans, Lewis and blood group antigens, proteoglycans, and glycogen, as well as some dietary glycans. We discuss the role of these metabolic pathways in the S. pneumoniae-host interaction, speculate on the potential of key Enzymes within these pathways as therapeutic targets, and relate S. pneumoniae as a model system to glycan processing in Other microbial pathogens.

Keywords

S. pneumoniae; carbohydrate-binding module; glycoside hydrolase; host glycans; host-pathogen interaction; transporter.

Figures