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1.
Exposure to hypoxia alters many aspects of endothelial cell metabolism and function; however, changes in surface glycoconjugates under these conditions have not been extensively evaluated. In the current studies, we examined surface glycoproteins of cultured bovine aortic (BAEC) and pulmonary arterial (BPAEC) endothelial cells under standard culture conditions (21% oxygen) and following exposure to hypoxia (0% oxygen) for varying time periods (30 min to 18 h) using a system of biotinylation, lectin binding (concanavalin A, Con A; Griffonia simplicifolia , GSA; Arachis hypogaea, PNA; Ricinus communis, RCA; or Triticum vulgaris, WGA), subsequent strep-avidin binding, and staining. Using these methods, we identified differences in lectin binding between the two cell types cultured in 21% oxygen with all lectins except PNA. With exposure to 0% oxygen, there was no change in lectin binding to most surface glycoproteins. Several surface glycoproteins, including glycoprotein IIIa on both cell types, demonstrated a time-dependent decrease in lectin binding; in addition, there was an increase in lectin binding to a few specific surface glycoproteins on each cell type within 30-60 min of exposure to 0% oxygen. These changes in specific surface glycoproteins were confirmed in both cell types by 125I labeling. Increased lectin binding was observed for Con A binding BAEC glycoproteins at molecular weight (MW) 116, 130, and 205 kDa, GSA binding BAEC glycoproteins at MW 120 and 205 kDa, and RCA binding BPAEC glycoproteins at MW 140 and 205 kDa. Increased binding of WGA or PNA was not observed during exposure to hypoxia. The specificity of lectin binding was further confirmed by competitive inhibition with the appropriate sugar. These studies demonstrate that there are baseline differences between BAEC and BPAEC cell surface glycoproteins and that exposure to hypoxia is associated with little change in lectin binding to most surface glycoproteins. There is, however, increased surface expression of a few glycoproteins that differ depending of the origin of the endothelial cell. Although the mechanism of this increase in lectin binding is not yet clear, subsequent studies suggested that it is due to increased availability of select carbohydrate moieties. The time course of these alterations suggests a possible role in the endothelial cell response to decreases in ambient oxygen tension.  相似文献   

2.
A competitive binding assay has been developed to determine how modifications to the B subunit of cholera toxin affect the binding affinity of the subunit for an ileal brush border membrane surface. The Ricinus communis120 agglutinin (RCA120) specifically binds to terminal beta-D-galactosyl residues such as those found in oligosaccharide side chains of glycoproteins and ganglioside GM1. Conditions were designed to produce binding competition between the B subunit of cholera toxin and the RCA120 agglutinin. Displacement of RCA120 from brush border surfaces was proportional to the concentration of B subunit added. This assay was used to study the effect of modification of B subunit on competitive binding affinity for the ileal brush border surface. The B subunit of cholera toxin was modified by coupling an average of five sulfhydryl groups to each B subunit molecule and by reaction of the SH-modified B subunit with liposomes containing a surface maleimide group attached to phosphatidylethanolamine. SH-modified B subunit was approximately 200-fold more effective than native B subunit in displacing lectin from brush border surfaces in the competitive binding assay. The enhanced binding activity was retained on covalent attachment of the modified B subunit to the liposome surface. We conclude that the B subunit of cholera toxin may be a useful targeting agent for directing liposomes to cell surfaces that contain a ganglioside GM1 ligand.  相似文献   

3.
We have previously reported the presence of a cell surface associated lectin activity in Giardia lamblia, a human protozoan parasite that is a significant cause of diarrheal disease worldwide [Lev, B., Ward, H., Keusch, G. T., & Pereira, M. E. A. (1986) Science (Washington, D.C.) 232, 71-73]. This lectin is specifically activated in vitro by a host protease, trypsin, which is secreted in vivo at the site of infection. The activated lectin agglutinates cells to which the parasite adheres in vivo and binds specifically to isolated brush border membranes of these cells. These findings suggest that this lectin may be of importance in the host-parasite interaction. We now report the identification of this lectin, which we have named taglin (to denote trypsin-activated Giardia lectin), and describe some of its properties. A monoclonal antibody that inhibits the hemagglutinating activity of taglin recognizes a protein of 28,000/30,000 kdaltons in Western blots of Giardia lysates. This finding was confirmed by direct demonstration of lectin activity with the technique of erythrocyte binding to proteins electroblotted to nitrocellulose, which revealed specific red cell binding to giardial protein bands in the same molecular weight range as those recognized by the monoclonal antibody. This study also elucidates the binding of taglin to terminal phosphomannosyl residues. The involvement of cell surface phosphate in binding of taglin to erythrocytes is shown by the abolition of lectin activity by alkaline phosphatase treatment of the erythrocytes. Taglin also requires divalent cations, Ca2+ or Mn2+, for hemagglutinating activity and is active within a narrow pH range of 6-7.  相似文献   

4.
Studies of membrane glycoconjugates of Taenia taeniaeformis were initiated by assays of the lectin binding characteristics of 35-day-old cysticerci. Parasites fixed in glutaraldehyde were incubated with one of the following FITC-labelled lectins: Concanavalin A (Con A), Lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA), Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA), peanut agglutinin (PNA), fucose binding protein (FBP) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and either their specific or a nonspecific sugar. Ultraviolet microscopy revealed that only Con A and LCA bound in large amounts to the surface of cysticerci. This binding was partly inhibited by the specific sugar, but the nonspecific sugar had little effect. The lectin not removed by either of the sugars may have been bound nonspecifically to the charged glycocalyx. Lectins were primarily bound on the anterior third of the parasite around the scolex invagination. Kinetic studies of lectin interactions were carried out with LCA and RCA by spectrophotofluorometric analysis of the amount bound specifically or nonspecifically over a range of lectin concentrations. Lens culinaris lectin binding was found to be specific and involve 2 receptors which showed large differences in their affinity for lectin and prevalence on the surface. Ricinus communis lectin did not bind specifically but nonspecific interactions were observed. Adherence of small numbers of host cells was shown to have no measurable effect on the lectin binding characteristics. The results suggest that the major surface carbohydrates exposed are D-mannose and/or D-glucose residues with the other sugar groups poorly represented. This relatively homogeneous surface may have implications for the antigenicity of the parasite in its host.  相似文献   

5.
6.
1. An anti-N lectin was extracted from Vicia unijuga leaves with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Purification of the lectin was achieved, after pretreatment of the PBS extract by ammonium sulfate fractionation and absorption with human M erythrocytes, by using a combination of conventional chromatographic techniques with asialoglycophorin AN-Sepharose CL-4B affinity chromatography. Purification steps were followed by increase of specific activity. 2. Homogeneity of the purified lectin was demonstrated by HPLC and SDS-PAGE. The purified lectin was a glycoprotein with 11.4% carbohydrate and relatively high percentages of serine, threonine and aspartic acid residues and had a Mw of 120,000 Da. 3. This lectin agglutinated human N and MN erythrocytes, but did not agglutinate M erythrocytes. Hemagglutination of the lectin was inhibited by glycophorin AN and N-active sialoglycopeptide released from human N erythrocytes by treatment with Pronase or trypsin. However, it was not inhibited by any of mono- and di-saccharides, ABH-active glycoproteins, glycophorin AM and M-active sialoglycopeptide liberated from human M erythrocytes by treatment with Pronase or trypsin.  相似文献   

7.
Water-soluble artificial glycoconjugate polymers were synthesized from poly(N-vinylpyrrolidone-co-maleic anhydride) by amidation with an amine-containing galactose derivative. The glycopolymers having different galactose contents were fully characterized in terms of chemical structure by NMR and potentiometric titrations, and their aqueous behavior was studied by viscometric measurements. Their specific binding properties were examined by enzyme-linked lectin assays using RCA(120) lectin. Whatever the glycopolymer, the grafted galactoses were shown to behave similarly to free galactose.  相似文献   

8.
Lectins conjugated with either peroxidase or ferritin were used to detect specific monosaccharide residues on the luminal front of he fenestrated endothelium in the capillaries of murine pancreas and intestinal mucosa. The lectins tested recognize, if accessible, the following residues: alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminyl (soybean lectin), beta- D-galactosyl (peanut agglutinin [PA] and Ricinus communis agglutinin- 120 [RCA]), beta-N-acetylglucosaminyl and sialyl residues (wheat germ agglutinin [WGA]), alpha-L-fucosyl (lotus tetragonolobus lectin), and alpha-D-glucosyl and beta-D-mannosyl (concanavalin A [ConA]). Thi labeled lectins were introduced by perfusion in situ after thoroughly flushing with phosphate-buffered saline the microvascular beds under investigation. Specimens were fixed by perfusion, and subsequently processed for peroxidase detection and electron microscopy. Control experiments included perfusion with: (a) unlabeled lectin before lectin conjugate; (b) labeled lectin together with the cognate hapten sugar, and (c) horseradish peroxidase or ferritin alone. Binding sites were found to be relatively homogeneously distributed on the plasmalemma proper, except for Lotus tetragonolobus lectin and Con A, which frequently bound in patches. Plasmalemmal vesicles, transendothelial channels, and their associated diaphragms were particularly rich in residues recognized by RCA and PA (beta-D-galactosyl residues) and by WGA (beta-N-acetylglucosaminyl residues). Receptors for all lectins tested appeared to be absent or considerably less concentrated on fenestral diaphragms. The results reported here extend and complement previous findings on the existence of microdomains generated by the preferential distribution of chemically different anionic sites (Simionescu et al., 1981, J. Cell Biol., 9:605-613 and 614-621).  相似文献   

9.
The effects of several commonly used detergents on the saccharide-binding activities of lectins were investigated using lectin-mediated agglutination of formalin-fixed erythrocytes and affinity chromatography of glycoproteins on columns of lectins immobilized on polyacrylic hydrazide-Sepharose. In the hemagglutination assays, Ricinus communis I (RCA1) and II (RCAII), concanavalin A (Con A), and the agglutinins from peanut (PNA), soybean (SBA), wheat germ (WGA), and Limulus polyphemus (LPA) were tested with several concentrations of switterionic, cationic, anionic, and nonionic detergents. It was found that increasing detergent concentrations eventually affected hemagglutination titers in both test and control samples, and the highest detergent concentrations not affecting lectin hemagglutinating activities were determined. The effects of detergents on specific binding of [3H]fetuin and asialo[3H]fetuin to and elution from columns of immobilized lectins were less severe when compared with lectins in solution, suggesting that the lectins are stabilized by covalent attachment to agarose beads. Nonionic detergents did not affect the binding efficiency of the immobilized lectins tested at concentrations used for membrane solubilization while cationic and zwitterionic detergents caused significant inhibition of Con A- and SBA-Sepharose activities. In sodium deoxycholate (greater than 1%) only RCAI-Sepharose retained its activity, whereas the activities of the other lectins were reduced dramatically. Low concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (0.05%) inhibited only the activity of immobilized SBA, but at higher concentration (0.1%) and prolonged periods of incubation (16 h, 23 degrees C) most of the lectins were inactivated. These data are compared with previous reports on the use of detergents in lectin affinity chromatography, and the conditions for the optimal use of detergents are detailed.  相似文献   

10.
To better understand the general distribution of glycoproteins and the distribution of specific glycoprotein-bound sugar residues in Paramecium, a survey of the binding pattern of selected lectins was carried out in P. tetraurelia, P. caudatum, and P. multimicronucleatum. Lectins studied were concanavalin A (Con A), Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinins I and II (GS I and GS II), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), Ulex europaeus (UEA I), peanut agglutinin (PNA), Ricinis communis toxin (RCA60) and agglutinin (RCA120), soybean agglutinin (SBA), Bauhinia purpurea agglutinin (BPA), Dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA), and Maclura pomifera agglutinin (MPA). Those giving the most distinctive patterns were Con A, GS II, WGA, UEA I, and PNA. No significant differences were found between the three species. Concanavalin A, a mannose/glucose-binding lectin, diffusely labeled the cell surface and cytoplasm and, unexpectedly, the nuclear envelopes. Events of nuclear division, and nuclear size and number were thus revealed. Both WGA and GS II, which are N-acetylglucosamine-binding lectins, labeled trichocyst tips, the cell surface, and the oral region, revealing stages of stomatogenesis. The lectin WGA, in addition, labeled the compartments of the phagosome-lysosome system. The lectin PNA, an N-acetyl galactosamine/galactose-binding protein, was very specific for digestive vacuoles. Finally, UEA I, a fucose-binding lectin, brightly labeled trichocysts, both their tips and body outlines. We conclude that a judicious choice of lectins can be used to localize glycoproteins and specific sugar residues as well as to study certain events of nuclear division, cellular morphogenesis, trichocyst discharge, and events in the digestive cycle of Paramecium.  相似文献   

11.
To obtain synthetic materials capable of selectively recognizing proteins and cells, and preserving their functions, biomembrane mimetic polymers having a phospholipid polar group and carbohydrate side chains were designed. Poly[2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (MPC)-co-n-butyl methacrylate (BMA)-co-2-lactobionamidoethyl methacrylate (LAMA)] (PMBL) was synthesized and coated on substrates by solvent evaporation. Selective binding of galactose-recognized lectin, RCA120, to a PMBL surface was investigated by measurement of surface plasmon resonance. The binding of RCA120 to the PMBL surface was confirmed by a remarkable change in resonance angle. The apparent affinity constant of RCA120 to PMBL3.0 (3.0 mol % LAMA unit in the feed) per LAMA unit was 2.77 x 10(5) M(-1). When a glucose-recognized lectin, concanavalin A, was in contact with PMBL, no change in the resonance angle was observed, and any nonspecific fouling of protein on PMBL was effectively reduced. Cells of the human hepatocellular liver carcinoma cell line (HepG2) having asialoglycoprotein receptors (ASGPRs) were seeded on polymer surfaces. On poly(BMA) (PBMA), many adherent cells were observed and were well-spread with monolayer adhesion, but cell adhesion was reduced on poly(MPC-co-BMA) (PMB). HepG2 adhesion was observed on PMBL because the cell has ASGPRs; the number of cells adhering to the PMBL polymer surfaces increased with an increase in the density of galactose residues on the surface. In contrast, adhesion of NIH-3T3 cells to PMBL was reduced in a manner similar to that on PMB because the NIH-3T3 cells did not have ASGPRs. Cell adhesion to the PMBL surface was well-regulated by ligand-receptor interactions. Furthermore, some of the cells adhering to the PMBL surface had a spheroid form, and similarly shaped spheroids were scattered on the surface. Although poly(BMA-co-LAMA) (PBL) has galactose residues, the adherent cells were spread in a manner similar to those on PBMA. The MPC units in PMBL contribute to make a spheroid formation of HepG2 cells. The amount of albumin secreted from a cell was compared with the chemical structure of the substrate. The spheroid shaped cells cultured on the PMBL surface secreted much more albumin than did the spreading cells that adhered to the PBMA. In conclusion, the biomembrane mimetic carbohydrate-immobilized phosphorylcholine polymers produced a suitable surface for biorecognition and preservation of cell function.  相似文献   

12.
Concanavalin A (Con A), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA) bound with either 125I, fluorescent dyes, or fluorescent polymeric microspheres were used to quantitate and visualize the distribution of lectin binding sites on mouse neuroblastoma cells. As viewed by fluorescent light and scanning electron microscopy, over 107 binding sites for Con A, WGA, and RCA appeared to be distributed randomly over the surface of differentiated and undifferentiated cells. An energy-dependent redistribution of labeled sites into a central spot occurred when the cells were labeled with a saturating dose of fluorescent lectin and maintained at 37°C for 60 min. Reversible labeling using appropriate saccharide inhibitors indicated that the labeled sites had undergone endocytosis by the cell. A difference in the mode of redistribution of WGA or RCA and Con A binding sites was observed in double labeling experiments. When less than 10% of the WGA or RCA lectin binding sites were labeled, only these labeled sites appeared to be removed from the cell surface. In contrast, when less than 10% of the Con A sites were labeled, both labeled and unlabeled Con A binding sites were removed from the cell surface. Cytochalasin B uncoupled the coordinate redistribution of labeled and unlabeled Con A sites, suggesting the involvement of microfilaments. Finally, double labeling experiments employing fluorescein-tagged Con A and rhodamine-tagged WGA indicate that most Con A and WGA binding sites reside on different membrane components and redistribute independenty of each other.  相似文献   

13.
From the seeds of Vicia sativa a lectin has been purified by affinity chromatography on Sephadex G-100, followed by specific elution with D-glucose. The lectin is a glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 70 000. The aminoacid composition and the total sugar content have been determined. This lectin agglutinates horse, rabbit and human erythrocytes, with no specificity for human blood groups, but does not agglutinate calf and sheep erythrocytes. The agglutinating activity is inhibited by mono-, di-, and trisaccharides with a pyranosyl residue whose free hydroxyl group in position 4 has the configuration of glucose, and by fructose. The lectin has mitogenic activity on human peripheral blood lymphocytes.  相似文献   

14.
Sack  H. -J.  Stöhr  M.  Schachner  M. 《Cell and tissue research》1983,228(1):183-204
Summary The binding of several plant lectins, Concanavalin A (ConA), Lens culinarisA (LCA), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and Ricinus communis agglutinin 120 (RCA120) to cell surfaces of developing mouse cerebellar cells was assayed by the use of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated compounds. Freshly dissociated, live single-cell suspensions from 6-day-old mouse cerebellum contain 93% ConA, 99% LCA, 98% WGA, and 59% RCA 120-positive cells with ring fluorescence. Of the RCA 120-positive cells, 4% express a high and 55% a lower or very low number of lectin receptors. Flow cytometric analysis of fluorescent lectin binding yields results qualitatively similar to those obtained by scoring positive and negative cells in the fluorescence microscope.In monolayer cultures of 6-day-old mouse cerebellum practically all cells express receptors for ConA, LCA, and WGA, whereas RCA 120 binding sites are absent from neurons with small cell bodies (granule, basket and stellate cells) and present in large number on neurons with large cell bodies (Purkinje and possibly Golgi Type-II cells) and fibroblasts. RCA 120 receptors are weakly expressed on astro-and oligodendroglia. Cell type-specific expression of RCA 120 receptors is constant throughout all ages studied (embryonic day 13 to postnatal day 9). At early embryonic ages the proportion of highly fluorescent neurons with large cell bodies is significantly increased.  相似文献   

15.
Platelet plasma membrane lectin activity   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The lectin activity of human platelet and erythrocyte membranes was evaluated using trypsinized, formalinized erythrocytes from eight species. Platelet membranes had the greatest lectin activity against cow erythrocytes, but also had significant activity against human, sheep, electric eel, and rabbit erythrocytes. In contrast, erythrocyte membranes only had low lectin activity against electric eel erythrocytes with no activity against the other types of erythrocytes tested. The platelet membrane lectin activity was found to reside in protein molecules on the external surface of the platelet plasma membrane. The lectin activity of platelet membranes was inhibited by amino sugars and some basic amino acids: N-acetylated amino sugars and other neutral sugars were without effect. These results demonstrate that the external surface of the platelet plasma membrane has a specific lectin activity.  相似文献   

16.
An Apios americana lectin (AAL) and a lectin-like protein (AALP) were purified from tubers by chromatography on Butyl-Cellulofine, ovomucoid-Cellulofine, and DEAE-Cellulofine columns. AAL showed strong hemagglutinating activity toward chicken and goose erythrocytes, but AALP showed no such activity toward any of the erythrocytes tested. The hemagglutinating activity of AAL was not inhibited by mono- or disaccharides, but was inhibited by glycoproteins, such as asialofetuin and ovomucoid, suggesting that AAL is an oligosaccharide-specific lectin. The cDNAs of AAL and AALP consist of 1,093 and 1,104 nucleotides and encode proteins of 302 and 274 amino acid residues, respectively. Both amino acid sequences showed high similarity to known legume lectins, and those of their amino acids involved in carbohydrate and metal binding were conserved.  相似文献   

17.
L-Fucose, D-mannose-specific lectin (SFL 100-2) particles produced by Streptomyces no. 100-2 were labeled with N-succinimidyl-[2,3-3H]propionate to investigate quantitatively their binding properties to human erythrocytes. The labeling did not influence the physical properties or the hemagglutinating activity of the lectin particles. The binding studies suggested that two kinds of receptor sites were present on the erythrocytes. Association constants (Ka's) of the lectin particles to the receptor sites and the numbers of the receptor sites (n) on human O erythrocytes were calculated to be 4.60 X 10(8) M-1 and 3.17 X 10(4)/cell for high-affinity receptor sites, and 7.5 X 10(7) M-1 and 1.33 X 10(5)/cell for low-affinity ones. The inhibition constants (Ki's) for L-fucose, p-nitrophenyl (PNP)-beta-L-fucoside, D-mannose, and PNP-alpha-D-mannoside were calculated to be 1.20 X 10(3), 1.82 X 10(3), 1.82 X 10(2), and 2.40 X 10(2) M-1, respectively. The numbers of carbohydrate-binding sites (m) on the lectin particles were estimated to be 2.82, 2.18, 2.19, and 2.21 for L-fucose, PNP-beta-L-fucoside, D-mannose, and PNP-alpha-D-mannoside, respectively, suggesting that SFL 100-2 has two carbohydrate-binding sites per particle.  相似文献   

18.
The complex carbohydrates at the cell surfaces of two TA3, murine mammary carcinoma ascites sublines (the strain-specific, TA3-St subline and the nonstrain-specific, TA3-Ha line) were compared by binding studies with 125I-labelled concanavalin A (con A), Ricinis communis agglutinin (RCA), and eel-serum agglutinin (ESA). The TA3-Ha cell bound equal amounts of con A, 1.5-fold more RCA, and 4-fold more ESA than the TA3-St cell. Binding-inhibition studies by these lectins and two others [wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) and potato lectin (STA)] suggest complementary binding-sites between con A and both RCA and ESA. Quantitative agglutination studies with the five lectins, and inhibition determinations by both neuraminidase-treated and untreated epiglycanin revealed that TA3-St, but not TA3-Ha, cells were agglutinated by con A, and that epiglycanin inhibited this agglutination, as well as the agglutination of rabbit erythrocytes by con A. The presence of a con A receptor on epiglycanin was also suggested by the binding of epiglycanin to con A-Sepharose, and its specific elution with methyl α-d-manno-pyranoside. TA3-St cells were agglutinated at a 10-15-fold lower concentration of either STA or RCA than TA3-Ha cells, but both cells were agglutinated by the same concentration of WGA and ESA. Inhibition by epiglycanin of agglutination of TA3-St cells by either STA or ESA occurred at a concentration lower than that of TA3-Ha cells, but epiglycanin inhibited RCA agglutination of TA3-Ha cells at a concentration  相似文献   

19.
For tissue engineering applications, it is necessary to balance the need for specific biological interactions with the need to prevent unfavorable nonspecific interactions. For this purpose, novel poly[(organo)phosphazenes] were synthesized having galactose and/or poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) side chains. The synthesis was described previously. Here, we investigate the human serum albumin (HSA) adhesion to these polymers using surface plasmon resonance (SPR). We could conclude that the incorporation of PEG reduced the protein adsorption. The influence of the galactose moieties was investigated using SPR and a sugar-lectin binding assay. The interaction between a lectin (Peanut agglutinin, PNA or Ricinus communis-agglutinin, RCA) and the polyphosphazene derivatives was evaluated. Type IIA polymers, having aminohexyl-galactose, phenylalanine ethyl ester, and glycine ethyl ester side chains, were capable of binding with the lectin. As the amount of galactose was increased, the extent of the galactose specific lectin binding was also increased (higher RU or absorbance). PEG containing polymers failed to bind specifically with the lectin. The presence of PEG, either as a spacer or as additional chains, interfered with the establishment of contact between the galactose and the binding site on the lectin. The adsorption of PNA or RCA to these types of polymers was attributed to nonspecific interactions. SPR was also used to determine rate and equilibrium constants. In addition the effect of the addition of water soluble polyphosphazenes on the enzymatic cleavage of o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside was investigated. The galactose moieties were not available as inhibitors because of the presence of PEG.  相似文献   

20.
A lectin-cationic peptide conjugate, 4(3)-CEL-I, was prepared from an invertebrate C-type lectin, CEL-I, and an amphiphilic alpha-helical peptide, 4(3)-beta Ala2 [Ac-(Leu-Ala-Arg-Leu)3-beta Ala2]. When 4(3)-CEL-I was incubated with rabbit erythrocytes, hemolysis was observed, especially at basic pH. Inhibition experiment using some carbohydrates suggested that hemolytic activity of 4(3)-CEL-I was caused by the interaction between 4(3)-beta Ala2 portion in the conjugate and the lipid bilayer after binding to the carbohydrate chains on the cell surface by the lectin activity of CEL-I.  相似文献   

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