HAS1 has a single
catalytic domain and is embedded in the
transmembrane channel to form
glycosidic linkages in the production of hyaluronan (HA). It contains five
transmembrane helices and three
interface helices whose overall architecture resembles a tepee. The
Pasteurella multocida bacterium isoform (pmHAS) contains 972 residues in which deletion of residues 1-117 does not affect enzyme activity, and the
C-terminal of the active site resides around residues 686-703. Two catalytic residues exist in the catalytic domain; an
aspartic acid to
asparagine mutation at position 196 (D196N) leads to loss of GlcUA-
transferase activity, and an aspartic acid to
lysine mutation at position 477 (D477K) leads to loss of
GlcNAc-transferase activity. Combination of both mutants leads to similar activity compared to the wild type. pmHAS additionally contains an Asp-Gly-Ser sequence that is conserved among beta-
glycosyltransferases. HAS2 is regulated by
dimerization and
ubiquitination. In
COS-1 monkey kidney cells transfected with mouse HAS2 and HAS3
plasmids, one site of ubiquitination is seen on the
lysine at residue 190. A K190R mutant formed a HAS2 dimer, and a flag-tagged and 6myc-tagged HAS2 and HAS3 showed the formation of both homo and
heterodimers with each other.
Chlorella virus HAS (Cv-HAS) share roughly 45% sequence similarity to human HAS2. HAS3 has a higher sequence identity to HAS2 (71%) compared to HAS1 (57%). HAS1, HAS2, and HAS3 have thirteen, fourteen, and fourteen
cysteine residues, respectively, compared to
S. pyogenes (spHAS) which contains six cysteine residues. A
sulfhydryl poisoned cysteine at position 225 in spHAS inhibits enzyme activity, but it is uncertain whether the
disulfide bonds yield a significant effect on the activity of the HAS enzymes.
Hydropathy plots among the three isoforms HAS1, HAS2, and HAS3 suggest that each protein is organized in a similar manner in the membrane. ==Mechanism==