The IgG-specific endoglycosidases EndoS and EndoS2 are distinguished by conformation and antibody recognition

Journal of Biological ChemistryJournal of Biological ChemistryJournal home page for Journal of Biological ChemistryAuthor links open overlay panel, ,

The IgG-specific endoglycosidases EndoS and EndoS2 from Streptococcus pyogenes can remove conserved N-linked glycans present on the Fc region of host antibodies to inhibit Fc-mediated effector functions. These enzymes are therefore being investigated as therapeutics for suppressing unwanted immune activation, and have additional application as tools for antibody glycan remodeling. EndoS and EndoS2 differ in Fc glycan substrate specificity due to structural differences within their catalytic glycosyl hydrolase domains. However, a chimeric EndoS enzyme with a substituted glycosyl hydrolase from EndoS2 loses catalytic activity, despite high structural homology between the two enzymes, indicating either mechanistic divergence of EndoS and EndoS2, or improperly-formed domain interfaces in the chimeric enzyme. Here, we present the crystal structure of the EndoS2-IgG1 Fc complex determined to 3.0 Å resolution. Comparison of complexed and unliganded EndoS2 reveals relative reorientation of the glycosyl hydrolase, leucine-rich repeat and hybrid immunoglobulin domains. The conformation of the complexed EndoS2 enzyme is also different when compared to the earlier EndoS-IgG1 Fc complex, and results in distinct contact surfaces between the two enzymes and their Fc substrate. These findings indicate mechanistic divergence of EndoS2 and EndoS. It will be important to consider these differences in the design of IgG-specific enzymes, developed to enable customizable antibody glycosylation.

Keywords

antibody

glycosylation

crystal structure

endoglycosidase

enzyme

Fc

glycoside hydrolase

immunoglobulin G

AbbreviationsCBM

carbohydrate-binding module

hIg domain

hybrid immunoglobulin domain

IdeS

immunoglobulin G-degrading enzyme of S. pyogenes

LRR domain

leucine-rich repeat domain

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc on behalf of American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

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