Distributed under Creative Commons Cc-by 4.0 a Simple and Rapid Method for Measuring Α-d-phosphohexomutases Activity by Using Anion-exchange Chromatography Coupled with an Electrochemical Detector

The interconversion of hexose-6-phosphate and hexose-1-phosphate can be directly analyzed by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography coupled with an electrochemical detector (HPAEC-PAD). Thus, this method can be used to measure the activities of N-acetylglucosamine-phosphate mutase (AGM), glucosamine-phosphate mutase (GlmM) and phosphoglucomutase (PGM), which are the members of α-D-phosphohexomutases superfamily. The detection limits were extremely low as 2.747 pmol, 1.365 pmol, 0.512 pmol, 0.415 pmol, 1.486 pmol and 0.868 pmol for N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphate (GlcNAc-1-P), N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcNAc-6-P), glucosamine-1-phosphate (GlcN-1-P), glucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcN-6-P), glucose-1-phosphate (Glc-1-P) and glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P), respectively. By employing HPAEC-PAD, activities of At AGM (AGM from Arabidopsis thaliana) on these six phosphohexoses can be detected. The K m of At AGM on Glc-1-P determined by HPAEC-PAD was 679.18 ± 156.40 µM, which is comparable with the K m of 707.09 ± 170.36 µM detected by traditional coupled assay. Moreover, the activity of Mt GlmM (GlmM from Mycobacterium tuberculosis) on GlcN-6-P tested by HPAEC-PAD was 7493.40 ± 309.12 nmol/min · mg, which is much higher than 288.97 ± 35.28 nmol/min · mg obtained by the traditional coupled assay. Accordingly, HPAEC-PAD is a more rapid and simple method than the traditional coupled assays given its high specificity and sensitivity, and will certainly bring convenience to further research of α-D-phosphohexomutases.

hexosamine pathway is a branch of glycolysis. It is associated with posttranslational protein modification by glycosylation and involved in the synthesis of glycolipids, proteoglycans, and glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchors (Vosseller et al., 2002;Wells, Vosseller & Hart, 2001;Zachara & Hart, 2004). The hexosamine pathway is a survival feature of neoplastic cells, plays a prominent role during tumourigenesis, and can be exploited therapeutically to target cancer cells (Vasseur & Manie, 2015). The hexosamine pathway is also essential for the growth of pathogenic bacteria, and can be used as a potential excellent target for anti-bacteria drugs (Li et al., 2012).
In living organisms, there are three variations of hexosamine pathway according to the different reaction sequence and enzymes, which are eukaryotic (Fig. 1A), prokaryotes (Fig. 1B) and mimivirus pathways (Piacente et al., 2014). The hexosamine pathway in mimivirus follows the eukaryotic-like strategy, but also shares some properties with prokaryotic pathway (Piacente et al., 2014). The enzymes in hexosamine pathway have been well studied except N-acetylglucosamine-phosphate mutase (AGM) and glucosaminephosphate mutase (GlmM) (Fang et al., 2013;Milewski, Gabriel & Olchowy, 2006). The main reason is the limitation of methodology on α-D-phosphohexomutases activity.
AGM, GlmM and phosphoglucomutase (PGM) all belong to the α-D-phosphohexomutases superfamily (Shackelford, Regni & Beamer, 2004). Despite the differences in substrate specificity, the catalytic properties in this superfamily are nearly the same. They catalyze the reversible conversion of hexose-6-P to hexose-1-P via a bisphosphorylated sugar intermediate. Active enzyme is phosphorylated at a conserved serine residue and binds one Mg 2+ ion (Shackelford, Regni & Beamer, 2004). Reversible conversion of hexose-1-P to hexose-6-P is difficult to be detected by a conventional method.
Traditionally, the activity of α-D-phosphohexomutase was determined by a coupled enzyme system. PGM catalyze the interconvertion of glucose-1-phosphate (Glc-1-P) and Glc-6-P. The normal way to detect the activity of PGM was using Glc-1-P as substrates, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) as coupled enzyme, by detect the increasing absorbance values of NADH at 340 nm (Nishinari et al., 2012;Wang & Zhang, 2010). This method was convenience and simple because G6PDH was commercially available and cost-effective. However, the detection of the reverse reaction which uses Glc-6-P as a substrate is still impossible.
GlcNAc-6-P was always used as a substrate for detecting the AGM activity, and GlcNAc-1-P uridylyltransferase (UAP), the fourth enzyme in hexosamine pathway, was used as a coupled enzyme (Boles et al., 1994;Greig et al., 2007;Jolly et al., 2000) (Fig. 1A). The detection of GlmM activity was carried out by using GlcN-6-P as substrate, and coupled with the third and forth enzyme GlmU (Li et al., 2012;Li et al., 2011) (Fig. 1B). However, this coupled method was very complex and tedious, and especially UAP and GlmU were commercial unavailable. Furthermore, the most noticeable limitation of the traditional coupled assay is impossible to detect the reverse reaction, which using GlcNAc-1-P or GlcN-1-P as substrate.
In order to overcome the limitations of the traditional coupled assay on the determination of the activity of α-D-phosphohexomutases, a simple and convenient method which can detect the interconversion of hexose-6-P and hexose-1-P directly is urgently needed.
High-performance anion-exchange chromatography (HPAEC) has been used for the quantitation of carbohydrates (Kazlowski, Pan & Ko, 2015;Yang, Hsieh & Lin, 2015) because its strong anion-exchange property allows the highly selective separation of carbohydrates. It has been tried to detect and separate the phosphohexoses directly by HPAEC for decades. In previous studies, Jolly et al. (1999) detected glucosamine phosphates by HPAEC with a post-column derivatization. detected glucose phosphates by HPAEC with 14 C labeled method. Naught & Tipton, (2005). However, they all needed radiochemical detector or fluorescence detector, and the phosphohexoses pretreatment were complex and expensive. Recently, several phosphohexoses had been successfully separated by HPAEC (Jeong et al., 2007;Marcellin et al., 2009), but the separation of GlcNAc-1-P and GlcNAc-6-P is still unsuccessful. And also, there is no simple and convenient way to determine the activity of α-D-phosphohexomutases directly.
In this study, we developed a method by using HPAEC-PAD to separate phosphohexoses, which can be helpful to determine α-D-phosphohexomutases activity, especially AGM. Considering that AGM also has the ability to convert other phosphohexose (Boles et al., 1994;Fang et al., 2013;Greig et al., 2007;Hofmann, Boles & Zimmermann, 1994), the interconvertion of GlcNAc-6-P and GlcNAc-1-P, Glc-6-P and Glc-1-P, as well as GlcN-6-P and GlcN-1-P was investigated. In our knowledge, this is the first report to detect the AGM activity directly. This method also can be used to determine the activities of GlmM and PGM, which convert the interconvertion of GlcN-6-P and GlcN-1-P, Glc-6-P and Glc-1-P.

Chromatography
The HPAEC system consists of a Dionex Bio-LC gradient pump with GM-3 (4 mm) gradient mixer, CarboPac PA-100 column (4 × 250 mm), and an electrochemical detector with AgCl as reference electrode. The waveform was carbohydrates (standard Quad), the following pulse potentials were used for detection: The sample injection volume is 20 µL and column oven temperature is maintained at 30 • C.

Elute conditions
The phosphohexoses should be eluted after 10 min because there were several interference peaks in the enzyme reaction mixture before 10 min on chromatograms. Thus, high pH elution was carried out in 100 mM sodium hydroxide under gradient conditions using a 80-720 mM sodium acetate gradient over 20 min at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min.

Expression and purification of AtAGM and MtGlmM
E. coli cells (At AGM::Amp) were grown exponentially at 37 • C in LB medium with Amp. When the optical density (OD) of the culture reached 0.8, IPTG was added at a final concentration of 1 mM, and growth was continued for 12 h at 16 • C. Harvested cells were disrupted by sonication, centrifugated at 20,000 g for 30 min; the resulting supernatant was loaded onto Ni-NTA column (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) for purification.
Mt GlmM and Mt GlmU were expressed and purified according to our previous studies (Li et al., 2012;Li et al., 2011).
The Steady-state kinetics of At AGM was analyzed by two methods using Glc-1-P as substrates. The HPAEC-PAD method was carried out by using 56.66 pmol At AGM or boiled enzymes, incubated for 10 min at 30 • C in a substrate buffer as described above, with varying concentrations of Glc-1-P (60-8,000 µM). Then, the assay was terminated immediately in boiling water and 200 µl of 0.2 M NaOH were added for HPAEC-PAD analysis.
All the experiments had repeated three times, and the K m and V max values were calculated by Origin 7.5.

MtGlmM assay
Mt GlmM (glucosamine-phosphate mutase, from Mycobacterium tuberculosis) activity was determined by two methods.
The traditional coupled assay was conducted in a coupled enzyme system with Mt GlmU, the third-and forth-step enzymes in hexosamine pathway in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Li et al., 2011) (Fig. 1B). The GlcN-1-P converted from GlcN-6-P by the mutase was quantitatively converted into UDP-GlcNAc in the presence of purified Mt GlmU in this coupled assay (Li et al., 2012) (Fig. 1B). The 50 µl reaction mixture contained 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 2.5 mM MgCl 2 , 1 mM GlcN-6-P, 0.6 mM acetyl-CoA, 0.2 mM Glc-1,6-2P, purified Mt GlmU (3.5 µg) and purified Mt GlmM (0.18 µg). The reaction was incubated at 37 • C for 20 min and terminated by adding 50 µl of stop solution containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 6 M guanidine hydrochloride. The mixture was then incubated for 10 min by the addition of 50 µl of Ellman's reagent solution containing 0.2 mM DTNB in the buffer with 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, and 1 mM EDTA.TNB, the product generated from the reaction of CoA-SH and DTNB, was monitored at 405 nm by Benchmark Plus plate reader (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA).
Therefore, HPAEC-PAD method can be used to identify phosphohexose and determine the activity of α-D-phosphohexomutases by detecting the substrate consuming and product increasing at the same time.

AGM assay
The chromatograms of the reaction mixtures of At AGM incubated with different substrates (GlcNAc-1-P, GlcNAc-6-P, GlcN-1-P, GlcN-6-P, Glc-1-P and Glc-6-P) were shown in Fig. 3, including the chromatograms before (incubated with boiled enzyme) and after the reaction. The consuming of substrates and the producing of the products could be observed well in the chromatograms. The results showed that At AGM indeed had the ability to convert these six phosphohexoses.
In order to identify the effectiveness of this novel method, both traditional coupled assay and HPAEC-PAD method were used to detect the steady-state kinetics and kinetic parameters of At AGM. The activity of Aspergillus fumigates AGM on Glc-1-P determined by traditional coupled assay from Fang et al. (2013) was also taken as a comparison. The Steady-state kinetics and kinetic parameters of At AGM were shown in Fig. 4 and Table 1. The K m of At AGM detected by HPAEC-PAD was 679.18 ± 156.40 µM, which was comparable with the K m of 707.09 ± 170.36 µM detected by traditional coupled assay. And the K cat was also similar between HPAEC-PAD method (40.43 s −1 ) and traditional coupled  Table 1 Kinetic parameters of At AGM was analyzed by using Glc-1-P as substrates by two methods. The HPAEC-PAD method was carried out by using 56.66 pmol At AGM or boiled enzymes, incubated for 10 min at 30 • C in a substrate buffer (300 µl) consisting of 20 mM PBS, pH 7.0, 10 mM MgSO 4 , and 20 µM glucose-1,6-bisphosphate (Glc-1,6-2P), with varying concentrations of Glc-1-P (60-8,000 µM). The traditional coupled assay was carried out in a 200 µl reaction volume containing 20 mM PBS, pH 7.0, 10 mM MgSO 4 , 20 µM glucose-1,6-bisphosphate (Glc-1,6-2P), a range of concentrations of Glc-1-P (60-7,000 µM), 1 mM NAD + and 2 units of G6PDH, the reaction was started by the addition of 56.66 pmol At AGM and incubated for 10 min at 30 • C. The results are the mean ± S.D. for three determinations.

Enzyme
At assay (39.32 s −1 ). These results were comparable with the K cat (41.00 s −1 ) obtained from Af AGM on the same substrate, which determined by traditional coupled assay (Table 1). The HPAEC-PAD method was simpler, more convenient than the traditional coupled assay (Greig et al., 2007;Hofmann, Boles & Zimmermann, 1994). The results obtained by the HPAEC-PAD method and traditional coupled assay were very similar, further confirmed the effectiveness of this novel method. Another significant advantage of HPAEC-PAD method was the substrate consuming and the product increasing could be detected at the same time, which enabled the detection of reverse reaction.

GlmM assay
Based on the excellent separation and detection abilities of this novel method on all phosphohexoses, we wonder if this method also could be used to determine the activities of GlmM and PGM besides AGM. GlmM is the second enzyme in hexosamine pathway Table 2 The activity of Mt GlmM with GlcN-6-P or GlcN-1-P as substrate was assayed by two methods. The traditional coupled method was assayed in a coupled enzyme system with Mt GlmU. The 50 µl reaction mixture contained 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 2.5 mM MgCl 2 , 1 mM GlcN-6-P, 0.6 mM acetyl-CoA, 0.2 mM Glc-1,6-2P, purified Mt GlmU (3.5 µg) and purified Mt GlmM (0.18 µg). The reaction was incubated at 37 • C for 20 min. The HPAEC-PAD method was carried out by using the purified Mt GlmM (0.18 µg), incubated at 37 • C for 20 min in a substrate buffer (50 µl) consisting of 1 mM GlcN-6-P (or GlcN-1-P) as substrate with 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 2.5 mM MgSO 4 , and 0.2 mM Glc-1,6-2P. The results are the mean ± S.D. for three determinations.
Mt GlmM activity was calculated as nanomoles of GlcN-6-P or GlcN-1-P consumed at per minute for per milligram protein (Table 2). It is noteworthy that the activity of Mt GlmM on GlcN-6-P tested by HPAEC-PAD (7493.40 ± 309.12 nmol/min · mg) was much higher than the traditional coupled assay (288.97 ± 35.28 nmol/min · mg). One possible reason was that the accuracy of the traditional coupled assay was mainly dependent on the activity of the coupled enzyme GlmU. GlmU is a bifunctional enzyme (Menginlecreulx & Vanheijenoort, 1993;Menginlecreulx & Vanheijenoort, 1994) (Fig. 1B), catalyzed the third and forth steps in the prokaryotic hexosamine pathway. In this coupled system, the activity of GlmM was measured indirectly by detecting the generation of CoA-SH, which was catalyzed by the acetyl transferase activity of GlmU (third step). But the acetyl transferase activity of GlmU has a very strong product inhibition when GlcN-1-P reached 0.003 mM (Singh, Das & Seshadri, 2012), so the GlmU become the rate-limiting enzyme in the traditional coupled assay, which result in the significantly decrease of Mt GlmM activity. Furthermore, GlmU was non-commercial, the expression and purification of GlmU was tedious, which makes the process complicated and the results unstable.
In contrast, HPAEC-PAD method could detect the Mt GlmM activity directly, which made the detection more sensitive, accurate and convenient. Moreover, HPAEC-PAD method could detect the substrate consuming and the product increasing at the same time, making the detection of reverse reaction possible. The activity of Mt GlmM on GlcN-1-P tested by HPAEC-PAD was 6277.90 ± 385.25 nmol/min · mg, which comparable with the activity on GlcN-6-P.

CONCLUSION
A HPAEC-PAD method was developed to analyze the activity of α-D-phosphohexomutases (AGM, PGM and GlmM). This method offers a simple and convenient method to measure the activity of α-D-phosphohexomutases on phosphohexoses. It is more sensitive, accurate and reliable than the traditional coupled assay. This method will bring convenience to further research on α-D-phosphohexomutases.