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Iterative structural homology search identifies new substrates of the protein O-fucosyltransferases POFUT3 and POFUT4

Eberand, B. M.; Hao, H.; Cielesh, M.; Muthukrishnan, K.; Kambanis, L.; Ayoub, A.; Kong, Y.; Fenwick, J.; Heilbronn, L.; Payne, R. J.; Passam, F. H.; Haltiwanger, R. S.; Larance, M.

2026-05-13 biochemistry
10.64898/2026.05.13.724420 bioRxiv
Show abstract

O-fucosylation plays an essential role in controlling protein folding, secretion and protein-protein interactions within the extracellular space. Recently, we identified a new form of protein O-fucosylation occurring on the N-terminal Elastin Microfibril Interaction (EMI) domain of several secreted proteins, mediated by two previously uncharacterized protein O-fucosyltransferases, POFUT3 (FUT10) and POFUT4 (FUT11). As all POFUT enzymes (POFUT1-4) are highly specific for the three-dimensional (3D) structure of their substrate protein domains, we postulated that structural homologues of these domains in other proteins may also be O-fucosylated. Here, we employed iterative protein structural homology searches as a novel strategy for identifying EMI-like domains that may serve as potential substrates for POFUT3/4. We discovered that microfibrillar-associated protein 2 and 5 (MFAP2/MFAP5) contain EMI-like domains and are O-fucosylated at high stoichiometry in human tissues. Unexpectedly, we showed that only POFUT3 is both necessary and sufficient for MFAP2/MFAP5 O-fucosylation, despite POFUT4 also having strong protein-protein interactions with MFAP2/MFAP5. Finally, we determined that O-fucosylation of MFAP2/MFAP5 is required for their efficient secretion, similar to other EMI domain-containing proteins. Together, these data demonstrate the power of sensitive structural homology analysis in identifying new enzyme-substrate relationships and protein-protein interactions.

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