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1.
Human galectins have functionally divergent roles, although most of the members of the galectin family bind weakly to the simple disaccharide lactose (Galbeta1-4Glc). To assess the specificity of galectin-glycan interactions in more detail, we explored the binding of several important galectins (Gal-1, Gal-2, and Gal-3) using a dose-response approach toward a glycan microarray containing hundreds of structurally diverse glycans, and we compared these results to binding determinants on cells. All three galectins exhibited differences in glycan binding characteristics. On both the microarray and on cells, Gal-2 and Gal-3 exhibited higher binding than Gal-1 to fucose-containing A and B blood group antigens. Gal-2 exhibited significantly reduced binding to all sialylated glycans, whereas Gal-1 bound alpha2-3- but not alpha2-6-sialylated glycans, and Gal-3 bound to some glycans terminating in either alpha2-3- or alpha2-6-sialic acid. The effects of sialylation on Gal-1, Gal-2, and Gal-3 binding to cells also reflected differences in cellular sensitivity to Gal-1-, Gal-2-, and Gal-3-induced phosphatidylserine exposure. Each galectin exhibited higher binding for glycans with poly-N-acetyllactosamine (poly(LacNAc)) sequences (Galbeta1-4GlcNAc)(n) when compared with N-acetyllactosamine (LacNAc) glycans (Galbeta1-4GlcNAc). However, only Gal-3 bound internal LacNAc within poly(LacNAc). These results demonstrate that each of these galectins mechanistically differ in their binding to glycans on the microarrays and that these differences are reflected in the determinants required for cell binding and signaling. The specific glycan recognition by each galectin underscores the basis for differences in their biological activities.  相似文献   

2.
Ideo H  Seko A  Ishizuka I  Yamashita K 《Glycobiology》2003,13(10):713-723
Galectin-8 is a member of the galectin family and has two tandem repeated carbohydrate recognition domains (CRDs). We determined the binding specificities of galectin-8 and its two CRDs for oligosaccharides and glycosphingolipids using ELISA and surface plasmon resonance assays. Galectin-8 had much higher affinity for 3'-O-sulfated or 3'-O-sialylated lactose and a Lewis x-containing glycan than for oligosaccharides terminating in Galbeta1-->3/4GlcNAc. This specificity was mainly attributed to the N-terminal CRD (N-domain), whereas the C-terminal CRD (C-domain) had only weak affinity for a blood group A glycan. The N-domain bound not only to oligosaccharides but also to glycosphingolipids including sulfatide (SM4 s), SM3, sialyl Lc4Cer, SB1a, GD1a, GM3, and sialyl nLc4Cer, suggesting that the N-domain recognizes a 3-O-sulfated or 3-O-sialylated Gal residue. The substitution of the C-3 of the Gal residue in lactose or N-acetyllactosamine with sulfate increased the degree of recognition by galectin-8 more potently than substitution with sialic acid. This is the first demonstration that galectin-8 binds to specific sulfated or sialylated glycosphingolipids with high affinity (KD approximately 10-8-10-9 M). When the Gln47 residue of the N-domain was converted to Ala47, the specific affinity for sulfated or sialylated glycans was selectively lost, indicating that this Gln47 plays important roles for binding to Neu5Acalpha2-->3Gal or SO3--->3Gal residues. The binding ability of galectin-8 to membrane-associated GM3 was confirmed using CHO cells, which predominantly express GM3. Binding of CHO cells to the mutein was significantly lower than to the N-domain.  相似文献   

3.
Galectins form a large family of beta-galactoside-binding proteins in metazoa and fungi. This report presents a comparative study of the functions of potential galectin genes found in the genome database of Caenorhabditis elegans. We isolated full-length cDNAs of eight potential galectin genes (lec-2-5 and 8-11) from a lambdaZAP cDNA library. Among them, lec-2-5 were found to encode 31-35-kDa polypeptides containing two carbohydrate-recognition domains similar to the previously characterized lec-1, whereas lec-8-11 were found to encode 16-27-kDa polypeptides containing a single carbohydrate-recognition domain and a C-terminal tail of unknown function. Recombinant proteins corresponding to lec-1-4, -6, and 8-10 were expressed in Escherichia coli, and their sugar-binding properties were assessed. Analysis using affinity adsorbents with various beta-galactosides, i.e., N-acetyllactosamine (Galbeta1-4GlcNAc), lacto-N-neotetraose (Galbeta1-4GlcNAcbeta1-3Galbeta1-4Glc), and asialofetuin, demonstrated that LEC-1-4, -6, and -10 have a significant affinity for beta-galactosides, while the others have a relatively lower affinity. These results indicate that the integrity of key amino acid residues responsible for recognition of lactose (Galbeta1-4Glc) or N-acetyllactosamine in vertebrate galectins is also required in C. elegans galectins. However, analysis of their fine oligosaccharide-binding properties by frontal affinity chromatography suggests their divergence towards more specialized functions.  相似文献   

4.
Galectin-1 is a member of the galectin family of glycan-binding proteins and occurs as an approximately 29.5-kDa noncovalent homodimer (dGal-1) that is widely expressed in many tissues. Here, we report that human recombinant dGal-1 bound preferentially and with high affinity (apparent K(d) approximately 2-4 microM) to immobilized extended glycans containing terminal N-acetyllactosamine (LN; Galbeta1-4GlcNAc) sequences on poly-N-acetyllactosamine (PL; (-3Galbeta1-4GlcNAcbeta1-)(n)) sequences, complex-type biantennary N-glycans, or novel chitin-derived glycans modified to contain terminal LN. Although terminal Gal residues are important for dGal-1 recognition, dGal-1 bound similarly to alpha3-sialylated and alpha2-fucosylated terminal LN, but not to alpha6-sialylated and alpha3-fucosylated terminal LN. The binding specificity of human recombinant dGal-1 was similar to that observed with purified bovine heart-derived dGal-1. Unexpectedly, dGal-1 bound free ligands in solution with relatively low affinity and displayed no preference for extended glycans, indicating that dGal-1 preferentially recognizes extended glycans only when they are surface-bound, such as found on cell surfaces. Human dGal-1 also bound to both native and desialylated human promyelocytic HL-60 cells with similar affinity as observed for immobilized long chain PL. Binding to these cells was reduced upon treatment with endo-beta-galactosidase, which cleaves PL sequences, indicating that cell-surface PLs are ligands. To test the role of dimerization in dGal-1 binding, we examined the binding of a mutated form of dGal-1 that weakly dimerizes (monomeric Gal-1 (mGal-1)) and a covalently dimerized (chemically cross-linked) form of mGal-1 (cd-mGal-1). dGal-1 and cd-mGal-1 had similar affinities that were both approximately 3.5-fold higher for immobilized PL than observed for mGal-1, suggesting that dGal-1 acts as a dimer to cross-link terminal LN units on immobilized PL. These results indicate that dGal-1 functions as a dimer to recognize LN units on extended PLs on cell surfaces.  相似文献   

5.
Adhesion/growth-regulatory galectins (gals) exert their functionality by the cis/trans-cross-linking of distinct glycans after initial one-point binding. In order to define the specificity of ensuing association events leading to cross-linking, we recently established a cell-based assay using fluorescent glycoconjugates as flow cytometry probes and tested it on two human gals (gal-1 and -3). Here we present a systematic study of tandem-repeat-type gal-4, -8 and -9 loaded on Raji cells resulting in the following key insights: (i) all three gals bound to oligolactosamines; (ii) binding to ligands with Galβ1-3GlcNAc or Galβ1-3GalNAc as basic motifs was commonly better than that to canonical Galβ1-4GlcNAc; (iii) all three gals bound to 3'-O-sulfated and 3'-sialylated disaccharides mentioned above better than that to parental neutral forms and (iv) histo-blood group ABH antigens were the highest affinity ligands in both the cell and the solid-phase assay. Fine specificity differences were revealed as follows: (i) gal-8 and -9, but not gal-4, bound to disaccharide Galβ1-3GlcNAc; (ii) increase in binding due to negatively charged substituents was marked only in the case of gal-4 and (iii) gal-4 and -8 bound preferably to histo-blood group A glycans, whereas gal-9 targeted B-type glycans. Experiments with single carbohydrate recognition domains (CRDs) of gal-4 showed that the C-CRD preferably bound to ABH glycans, whereas the N-CRD associated with oligolactosamines. In summary, the comparative analysis disclosed the characteristic profiles of glycan reactivity for the accessible CRD of cell-bound gals. These results indicate the distinct sets of functionality for these three members of the same subgroup of human gals.  相似文献   

6.
Galectins, a group of β-galactoside-binding lectins, are involved in multiple functions through specific binding to their oligosaccharide ligands. No previous work has focused on their interaction with glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). In the present work, affinities of established members of human galectins toward a series of GAGs were investigated, using frontal affinity chromatography. Structurally-defined keratan sulfate (KS) oligosaccharides showed significant affinity to a wide range of galectins if Gal residue(s) remained unsulfated, while GlcNAc sulfation had relatively little effect. Consistently, galectins showed much higher affinity to corneal type I than cartilageous type II KS. Unexpectedly, galectin-3, -7, and -9 also exerted significant affinity to desulfated, GalNAc-containing GAGs, i.e., chondroitin and dermatan, but not at all to hyaluronan and N-acetylheparosan. These observations revealed that the integrity of 6-OH of βGalNAc is important for galectin recognition of these galactosaminoglycans, which were shown, for the first time, to be implicated as potential ligands of galectins.  相似文献   

7.
8.
We have investigated the consequences of introducing a bisecting GlcNAc moiety into biantennary N-glycans. Computational analysis of glycan conformation with prolonged simulation periods in vacuo and in a solvent box revealed two main effects: backfolding of the alpha1-6 arm and stacking of the bisecting GlcNAc and the neighboring Man/GlcNAc residues of both antennae. Chemoenzymatic synthesis produced the bisecting biantennary decasaccharide N-glycan and its alpha2-3(6)-sialylated variants. They were conjugated to BSA to probe the ligand properties of N-glycans with bisecting GlcNAc. To assess affinity alterations in glycan binding to receptors, testing was performed with purified lectins, cultured cells, tissue sections and animals. The panel of lectins, including an adhesion/growth-regulatory galectin, revealed up to a sixfold difference in affinity constants for these neoglycoproteins relative to data on the unsubstituted glycans reported previously [André, S., Unverzagt, C., Kojima, S., Dong, X., Fink, C., Kayser, K. & Gabius, H.-J. (1997) Bioconjugate Chem. 8, 845-855]. The enhanced affinity for galectin-1 is in accord with the increased percentage of cell positivity in cytofluorimetric and histochemical analysis of carbohydrate-dependent binding of labeled neoglycoproteins to cultured tumor cells and routinely processed lung cancer sections. Intravenous injection of iodinated neoglycoproteins carrying galactose-terminated N-glycans into mice revealed the highest uptake in liver and spleen for the bisecting compound compared with the unsubstituted or core-fucosylated N-glycans. Thus, this substitution modulates ligand properties in interactions with lectins, a key finding of this report. Synthetic glycan tailoring provides a versatile approach to the preparation of newly substituted glycans with favorable ligand properties for medical applications.  相似文献   

9.
The extent of glycans heterogeneity in a pathological human immunoglobulin M ZAJ has been studied on oligosaccharides released by hydrazinolysis from the purified glycoprotein. After reduction with NaB3H4, asparagine-linked carbohydrate chains were separated by affinity chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose into oligomannosidic and N-acetyllactosaminic types. Glycans of the oligomannosidic type were further fractionated by HPLC and those of the N-acetyllactosamine type by preparative high-voltage electrophoresis. The primary structure of the main oligosaccharides was investigated on the basis of micro-methylation analysis, mass spectrometry and sequential exo-glycosidase digestion. Glycans of the oligomannosidic type varied in size from Man5GlcNAc2 to Man9GlcNAc2. N-Acetyllactosaminic glycans were found of the biantennary, bisected-biantennary and triantennary types. They presented a higher degree of heterogeneity due to the presence of a variable number of NeuAc and fucose residues. The new structures we report here were in addition to the major biantennary one we previously described on the basis of methylation analysis and 500 MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy (Cahour, A., Debeire, P., Hartmann, L., Montreuil, J., Van Halbeek, H. and Vliegenthart, J.F.G. (1984) FEBS Lett. 170, 343-349): NeuAc(alpha 2-6)Gal(beta 1-4)GlcNAc(beta 1-2)Man(alpha 1-3)[Gal(beta 1-4)Glc-NAc(beta 1-2)Man(alpha 1-6)]Man(beta 1-4)]Glc-NAc(beta 1-4) [Fuc(alpha 1-6)]GlcNAc.  相似文献   

10.
The galectins are a family of beta-galactoside-binding animal lectins with a conserved carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD). They have a high affinity for small beta-galactosides, but binding specificity for complex glycoconjugates varies considerably within the family. The ligand recognition is essential for their proper function, and the structures of several galectins have suggested their mechanism of carbohydrate binding. Galectin-9 has two tandem CRDs with a short linker, and we report the crystal structures of mouse galectin-9 N-terminal CRD (NCRD) in the absence and the presence of four ligand complexes. All structures form the same dimer, which is quite different from the canonical 2-fold symmetric dimer seen for galectin-1 and -2. The beta-galactoside recognition mechanism in the galectin-9 NCRD is highly conserved among other galectins. In the apo form structure, water molecules mimic the ligand hydrogen-bond network. The galectin-9 NCRD can bind both N-acetyllactosamine (Galbeta1-4GlcNAc) and T-antigen (Galbeta1-3GalNAc) with the proper location of Arg-64. Moreover, the structure of the N-acetyllactosamine dimer (Galbeta1-4GlcNAcbeta1-3Galbeta1-4GlcNAc) complex shows a unique binding mode of galectin-9. Finally, surface plasmon resonance assay showed that the galectin-9 NCRD forms a homophilic dimer not only in the crystal but also in solution.  相似文献   

11.
Ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA120) is considered a versatile tool for the detection of galactose-containing oligosaccharides. However, possible contamination by the highly toxic isolectin 'ricin' has become a critical issue for RCA120's continued use. From a practical viewpoint, it is necessary to find an effective substitute for RCA120. For this purpose, we examined by means of frontal affinity chromatography over 100 lectins which have similar sugar-binding specificities to that of RCA120. It was found that Erythrina cristagalli lectin (ECL) showed the closest similarity to RCA120. Both lectins prefer Gal beta1-4GlcNAc (type II) to Gal beta1-3GlcNAc (type I) structures, with increased affinity for highly branched N-acetyllactosamine-containing N-glycans. Their binding strength significantly decreased following modification of the 3-OH, 4-OH and 6-OH of the galactose moiety of the disaccharide, as well as the 3-OH of its N-acetylglucosamine residue. Several differences were also observed in the affinity of the two lectins for various other ligands, as well as effects of bisecting GlcNAc and terminal sialylation. Although six other Erythrina-derived lectins have been reported with different amino acid sequences, all showed quite similar profiles to that of ECL, and thus, to RCA120. Erythrina lectins can therefore serve as effective substitutes for RCA120, taking the above differences into consideration.  相似文献   

12.
The involvement of galectins as pleiotropic regulators of cell adhesion and growth in disease progression explains the interest to define their ligand-binding properties. Toward this end, it is desirable to approach in vivo conditions to attain medical relevance. In order to simulate physiological conditions with cell surface glycans as recognition sites and galectins as mediators of intercellular contacts we developed an assay using galectin-loaded Raji cells. The extent of surface binding of fluorescent neoglycoconjugates depended on the lectin presence and the type of lectin, the nature of the probes' carbohydrate headgroup and the density of unsubstituted beta-galactosides on the cell surface. Using the most frequently studied galectins-1 and -3, application of this assay led to rather equal binding levels for linear and branched oligomers of N-acetyllactosamine. A clear preference of galectin-3 for alpha1-3-linked galactosylated lactosamine was noted. In parallel, a panel of 24 neoglycoconjugates was tested as inhibitors of galectin binding from solution to N-glycans of surface-immobilized asialofetuin. These two assays differ in presentation of the galectin and ligand, facilitating identification of assay-dependent properties. Under the condition of the cell assay, selectivity among oligosaccharides for the lectins was higher, and extraordinary affinity of galectin-1 to 3'-O-sulfated probes in a solid-phase assay was lost in the cell assay. Having introduced and validated a cell assay, the comprehensive profiling of ligand binding to cell-surface-presented galectins is made possible.  相似文献   

13.
Two new oligosaccharides were isolated from the urine of a patient with GM1 gangliosidosis. Final purification of the oligosaccharides was accomplished by capillary supercritical fluid chromatography. Structural analysis was by chemical analysis, chemical-ionization mass spectrometry and 400-MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy, leading to two primary structures. The first is derived from a classical triantennary N-acetyllactosamine-type glycan: Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-4(Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-2)Man alpha 1-3Man beta 1-4GlcNAc. The second is unusual with a terminal disaccharide Gal beta 1-6Gal, which had not yet been described for glycans of the N-acetyllactosamine type: Gal beta 1-6Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-2Man alpha 1-6Man beta 1-4GlcNAc.  相似文献   

14.
Trichomonad species are widespread unicellular flagellated parasites of vertebrates which interact with their hosts through carbohydrate-lectin interactions. In the past, some data have been accumulated regarding their lipo(phospho)glycans, a major glycoconjugate on their cell surfaces; on the other hand, other than biosynthetic aspects, few details about their N-linked oligosaccharides are known. In this study, we present both mass spectrometric and high-performance liquid chromatography data about the N-glycans of different strains of Trichomonas vaginalis, a parasite of the human reproductive tract. The major structure in all strains examined is a truncated oligomannose form (Man(5)GlcNAc(2)) with α1,2-mannose residues, compatible with a previous bioinformatic examination of the glycogenomic potential of T. vaginalis. In addition, dependent on the strain, N-glycans modified by pentose residues, phosphate or phosphoethanolamine and terminal N-acetyllactosamine (Galβ1,4GlcNAc) units were found. The modification of N-glycans by N-acetyllactosamine in at least some strains is shared with the lipo(phospho)glycan and may represent a further interaction partner for host galectins, thereby playing a role in binding of the parasite to host epithelia. On the other hand, the variation in glycosylation between strains may be the result of genetic diversity within this species.  相似文献   

15.
We have recently shown that the carbohydrate-binding pattern of galectins in cells differs from that determined in artificial (non-cellular) test-systems. To understand the observed discrepancy, we compared several test-systems differing in the mode of galectin presentation on solid phase. The most representative system was an assay where the binding of galectin (human galectins-1 and -3 were studied) to asialofetuin immobilized on solid phase was inhibited by polyacrylamide glycoconjugates, Glyc-PAA. This approach permits us to range quantitatively glycans (Glyc) by their affinity to galectin, i.e. to study both high and low affinity ligands. Our attempts to imitate the cell system by solid-phase assay were not successful. In the cell system galectin binds glycoconjugates by one carbohydrate-recognizing domain (CRD), and after that the binding to the remaining non-bound CRD is studied by means of fluorescein-labeled Glyc-PAA. In an “imitation” variant when galectins are loaded on adsorbed asialofetuin or Glyc-PAA followed by revealing of binding by the second Glyc-PAA, the interaction was not observed or glycans were ordered poorly, unlike in the inhibitory assay. When galectins were adsorbed on corresponding antibodies (when all CRDs were free for recognition by carbohydrate), a good concentration dependence was observed and patterns of specificities were similar (though not identical) for the two methods; notably, this system does not reflect the situation in the cell. Besides the above-mentioned, other variants of solid-phase analysis of galectin specificity were tested. The results elucidate the mechanism and consequence of galectin CRD cis-masking on cell surface.  相似文献   

16.
Galectins are implicated in a large variety of biological functions, many of which depend on their carbohydrate-binding ability. Fifteen members of the family have been identified in vertebrates based on binding to galactose (Gal) that is mediated by one or two, evolutionarily conserved, carbohydrate-recognition domains (CRDs). Variations in glycan structures expressed on glycoconjugates at the cell surface may, therefore, affect galectin binding and functions. To identify roles for different glycans in the binding of the three types of mammalian galectins to cells, we performed fluorescence cytometry at 4 degrees C with recombinant rat galectin-1, human galectin-3, and three forms of human galectin-8, to Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and 12 different CHO glycosylation mutants. All galectin species bound to parent CHO cells and binding was inhibited >90% by 0.2 M lactose. Galectin-8 isoforms with either a long or a short inter-CRD linker bound similarly to CHO cells. However, a truncated form of galectin-8 containing only the N-terminal CRD bound only weakly to CHO cells and the C-terminal galectin-8 CRD exhibited extremely low binding. Binding of the galectins to the different CHO glycosylation mutants revealed that complex N-glycans are the major ligands for each galectin except the N-terminal CRD of galectins-8, and also identified some fine differences in glycan recognition. Interestingly, increased binding of galectin-1 at 4 degrees C correlated with increased propidium iodide (PI) uptake, whereas galectin-3 or -8 binding did not induce permeability to PI. The CHO glycosylation mutants with various repertoires of cell surface glycans are a useful tool for investigating galectin-cell interactions as they present complex and simple glycans in a natural mixture of multivalent protein and lipid glycoconjugates anchored in a cell membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Galectins form a large family of β-galactoside-binding proteins in metazoa and fungi. This report presents a comparative study of the functions of potential galectin genes found in the genome database of Caenorhabditis elegans. We isolated full-length cDNAs of eight potential galectin genes (lec-25 and 811) from a λZAP cDNA library. Among them, lec-2–5 were found to encode 31–35-kDa polypeptides containing two carbohydrate-recognition domains similar to the previously characterized lec-1, whereas lec-8–11 were found to encode 16–27-kDa polypeptides containing a single carbohydrate-recognition domain and a C-terminal tail of unknown function. Recombinant proteins corresponding to lec-1–4, -6, and 810 were expressed in Escherichia coli, and their sugar-binding properties were assessed. Analysis using affinity adsorbents with various β-galactosides, i.e., N-acetyllactosamine (Galβ1-4GlcNAc), lacto-N-neotetraose (Galβ1-4GlcNAcβ1-3Galβ1-4Glc), and asialofetuin, demonstrated that LEC-1–4, -6, and -10 have a significant affinity for β-galactosides, while the others have a relatively lower affinity. These results indicate that the integrity of key amino acid residues responsible for recognition of lactose (Galβ1-4Glc) or N-acetyllactosamine in vertebrate galectins is also required in C. elegans galectins. However, analysis of their fine oligosaccharide-binding properties by frontal affinity chromatography suggests their divergence towards more specialized functions.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Galectins, a family of soluble beta-galactosyl-binding lectins, are believed to mediate cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions during development, inflammation, apoptosis, and tumor metastasis. However, neither the detailed mechanisms of their function(s) nor the identities of their natural ligands have been unequivocally elucidated. Of the several galectins present in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the 16-kDa "proto" type and the 32-kDa "tandem-repeat" type are the best characterized so far, but their carbohydrate specificities have not been examined in detail. Here, we report the carbohydrate-binding specificity of the recombinant C. elegans 16-kDa galectin and the structural analysis of its binding site by homology modeling. Our results indicate that unlike the galectins characterized so far, the C. elegans 16-kDa galectin interacts with most blood group precursor oligosaccharides (type 1, Galbeta1,3GlcNAc, and type 2, Galbeta1,4GlcNAc; Talpha, Galbeta1,3GalNAcalpha; Tbeta, Galbeta1,3GalNAcbeta) and gangliosides containing the Tbeta structure. Homology modeling of the C. elegans 16-kDa galectin CRD revealed that a shorter loop containing residues 66-69, which enables interactions of Glu(67) with both axial and equatorial -OH at C-3 of GlcNAc (in Galbeta1,4GlcNAc) or at C-4 of GalNAc (in Galbeta1,3GalNAc), provides the structural basis for this novel carbohydrate specificity.  相似文献   

20.
We report a detailed structural analysis of the N-glycans of Caenorhabditis elegans recognized by C. elegans galectin LEC-6. Glycoproteins of C. elegans captured by an immobilized LEC-6 affinity adsorbent were isolated. The N-glycans of these glycoproteins were then liberated by hydrazinolysis and labeled with the fluorophore 2-aminopyridine (PA). The derived pyridylaminated (PA)-sugars were further fractionated by rechromatography on immobilized LEC-6 adsorbent and by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The structures of the PA-sugars thus obtained were analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS/MS) in conjunction with glycosidase digestion. We confirmed that all PA-sugars having affinity for LEC-6 contain a Gal-Fuc disaccharide unit, and that this unit is bound to the innermost GlcNAc residue of the N-glycan chain. The dissociation constants of LEC-6 for these glycans were measured by frontal affinity chromatography. LEC-6 exhibited higher affinity for oligosaccharides having a Gal-Fuc unit linked to position 6 of the innermost GlcNAc residue than for those having Galbeta1-4GlcNAc units. Affinity for the former disappeared, however, following treatment with beta-galactosidase. If the glycan contained a Hex-Fuc disaccharide linked to the penultimate GlcNAc residue, the affinity would be diminished. We propose, therefore, that the galectins of C. elegans utilize the Gal-Fuc disaccharide unit for recognition instead of the Gal-GlcNAc unit that is common in vertebrates.  相似文献   

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