Authors
Michael Wacker, Dennis Linton, Paul G Hitchen, Mihai Nita-Lazar, Stuart M Haslam, Simon J North, Maria Panico, Howard R Morris, Anne Dell, Brendan W Wren, Markus Aebi
Publication date
2002/11/29
Journal
Science
Volume
298
Issue
5599
Pages
1790-1793
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
N-linked protein glycosylation is the most abundant posttranslation modification of secretory proteins in eukaryotes. A wide range of functions are attributed to glycan structures covalently linked to asparagine residues within the asparagine-X-serine/threonine consensus sequence (Asn-Xaa-Ser/Thr). We found an N-linked glycosylation system in the bacterium Campylobacter jejuniand demonstrate that a functional N-linked glycosylation pathway could be transferred into Escherichia coli. Although the bacterial N-glycan differs structurally from its eukaryotic counterparts, the cloning of a universal N-linked glycosylation cassette in E. coli opens up the possibility of engineering permutations of recombinant glycan structures for research and industrial applications.
Total citations
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