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Dynamic organizational strategies of multidomain glycosyltransferases revealed by high-speed AFM and solution biophysics

Created on 09 Jun 2026

Authors

Yagi, H., Lin, Y.-R., Umezawa, F., Kim, A., Tomuro, K., Morishima, K., Kodama, A., Ishii, K., Uchiyama, S., Satoh, T., Sugiyama, M., Uchihashi, T., Kato, K.

Abstract

Glycosyltransferases often contain multiple structural modules that contribute to substrate recognition, catalytic coordination, and higher-order molecular organization. However, how multidomain glycosyltransferases dynamically organize their catalytic domains in solution remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated the assembly states and conformational dynamics of POMGNT2, LARGE1, K4CP, and L137 using high-speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM) integrated with complementary solution biophysical analyses. POMGNT2 formed a stable dimeric architecture with limited large-scale conformational fluctuation, consistent with its role in site-selective substrate recognition. In contrast, LARGE1 and K4CP exhibited concentration-dependent and heterogeneous assembly behavior. K4CP displayed pronounced open-closed interdomain motion and substrate-dependent conformational compaction, indicating dynamic catalytic-domain reorganization during glycan elongation. By comparison, the mimivirus glycosyltransferase candidate L137 predominantly behaved as a monomeric species under the tested conditions. These findings demonstrate that multidomain glycosyltransferases employ diverse dynamic organizational strategies ranging from rigid recognition architectures to highly flexible and reversible catalytic assemblies. Our results further suggest that glycosyltransferase function is governed not only by catalytic-domain structure, but also by dynamic conformational coordination adapted to distinct catalytic demands.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 09 Jun 2026.

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