首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The crystal structure of the seed lectin from the tropical legume Bowringia milbraedii was determined in complex with the disaccharide ligand Man(alpha1-2)Man. In solution, the protein exhibits a dynamic dimer-tetramer equilibrium, consistent with the concanavalin A-type tetramer observed in the crystal. Contacts between the tetramers are mediated almost exclusively through the carbohydrate ligand, resulting in a crystal lattice virtually identical to that of the concanavalin-A:Man(alpha1-2)Man complex, even though both proteins have less than 50% sequence identity. The disaccharide binds exclusively in a "downstream" binding mode, with the non-reducing mannose occupying the monosaccharide-binding site. The reducing mannose is bound in a predominantly polar subsite involving Tyr131, Gln218, and Tyr219.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of a Man/Glc-specific lectin from the seeds of the bloodwood tree (Pterocarpus angolensis), a leguminous plant from central Africa, has been determined in complex with mannose and five manno-oligosaccharides. The lectin contains a classical mannose-specificity loop, but its metal-binding loop resembles that of lectins of unrelated specificity from Ulex europaeus and Maackia amurensis. As a consequence, the interactions with mannose in the primary binding site are conserved, but details of carbohydrate-binding outside the primary binding site differ from those seen in the equivalent carbohydrate complexes of concanavalin A. These observations explain the differences in their respective fine specificity profiles for oligomannoses. While Man(alpha1-3)Man and Man(alpha1-3)[Man(alpha1-6)]Man bind to PAL in low-energy conformations identical with that of ConA, Man(alpha1-6)Man is required to adopt a different conformation. Man(alpha1-2)Man can bind only in a single binding mode, in sharp contrast to ConA, which creates a higher affinity for this disaccharide by allowing two binding modes.  相似文献   

3.
Cyanovirin-N (CVN) is a novel cyanobacterial protein that selectively binds with nanomolar affinities the mammalian oligosaccharides Man(8) and Man(9). Consequently, CVN potently blocks HIV entry through highly avid carbohydrate-mediated interactions with the HIV-envelope glycoprotein gp120, and is under preclinical investigation as an anti-HIV microbicide. CVN contains two non-overlapping carbohydrate-binding sites that bind the disaccharide Manalpha(1-2)Manalpha (which represents the terminal disaccharide of all three arms of Man(9)) with low to sub-micromolar affinities. The solution structure of a 1:2 CVN:Manalpha(1-2)Manalpha complex revealed that CVN recognizes the stacked conformation of Manalpha(1-2)Manalpha through a deep hydrophilic-binding pocket on one side of the protein (site 2) and a semi-circular cleft on the other (site 1). With the prominent exception of the C1 hydroxyl group of the reducing mannopyranose ring, the bound disaccharide is positioned so that each hydroxyl group is involved in a direct or water-mediated hydrogen bond to the polar or charged side-chains comprising the binding pocket. Thus, to determine whether the next-most reducing mannopyranose ring will augment CVN affinity and selectivity, we have characterized by NMR and ITC the binding of CVN to three synthetic trisaccharides representing the full-length D1, D2 and D3 arms of mammalian oligomannosides. Our findings demonstrate that site 1 is able to discriminate between the three related trisaccharides methyl Manalpha(1-2)Manalpha(1-2)Man, methyl Manalpha(1-2)Manalpha(1-3)Man and methyl Manalpha(1-2)Manalpha(1-6)Man with remarkable selectivity, and binds these trisaccharides with K(A) values ranging from 8.1x10(3)M(-1) to 6.6x10(6)M(-1). Site 2 is less selective in that it binds all three trisaccharides with similar K(A) values ranging from 1.7 to 3.7(+/-0.3)x10(5)M(-1), but overall binds these trimannosides with higher affinities than site 1. The diversity of pathogenic organisms that display alpha(1-2)-linked mannosides on their cell surfaces suggests a broad defensive role for CVN in its cyanobacterial source.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Cyanovirin-N (CVN) is a novel, 11 kDa cyanobacterial protein that potently inhibits viral entry by diverse strains of HIV through high-affinity carbohydrate-mediated interactions with the viral envelope glycoprotein gp120. CVN contains two symmetry-related carbohydrate binding sites of differing affinities that selectively bind to Man(8) D1D3 and Man(9) with nanomolar affinities, the carbohydrates that also mediate CVN:gp120 binding. High-resolution structural studies of CVN in complex with a representative oligosaccharide are desirable for understanding the structural basis for this unprecedented specificity. RESULTS: We have determined by multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy the three-dimensional solution structure of CVN in complex with two equivalents of the disaccharide Manalpha1-2Manalpha, a high-affinity ligand which represents the terminal-accessible disaccharide present in Man(8) D1D3 and Man(9). The structure reveals that the bound disaccharide adopts the stacked conformation, thereby explaining the selectivity for Man(8) D1D3 and Man(9) over other oligomannose structures, and presents two novel carbohydrate binding sites that account for the differing affinities of the two sites. The high-affinity site comprises a deep pocket that nearly envelops the disaccharide, while the lower-affinity site comprises a semicircular cleft that partially surrounds the disaccharide. The approximately 40 A spacing of the two binding sites provides a simple model for CVN:gp120 binding. CONCLUSIONS: The CVN:Manalpha1-2Manalpha complex provides the first high-resolution structure of a mannose-specific protein-carbohydrate complex with nanomolar affinity and presents a new carbohydrate binding motif, as well as a new class of carbohydrate binding protein, that facilitates divalent binding via a monomeric protein.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structures of concanavalin A in complex with Man(alpha1-6)Man(alpha1-O)Me and Man(alpha1-3)Man(alpha1-O)Me were determined at resolutions of 2.0 and 2.8 A, respectively. In both structures, the O-1-linked mannose binds in the conserved monosaccharide-binding site. The O-3-linked mannose of Man(alpha1-3)Man(alpha1-O)Me binds in the hydrophobic subsite formed by Tyr-12, Tyr-100, and Leu-99. The shielding of a hydrophobic surface is consistent with the associated large heat capacity change. The O-6-linked mannose of Man(alpha1-6)Man(alpha1-O)Me binds in the same subsite formed by Tyr-12 and Asp-16 as the reducing mannose of the highly specific trimannose Man(alpha1-3)[Man(alpha1-6)]Man(alpha1-O)Me. However, it is much less tightly bound. Its O-2 hydroxyl makes no hydrogen bond with the conserved water 1. Water 1 is present in all the sugar-containing concanavalin A structures and increases the complementarity between the protein-binding surface and the sugar, but is not necessarily a hydrogen-bonding partner. A water analysis of the carbohydrate-binding site revealed a conserved water molecule replacing O-4 on the alpha1-3-linked arm of the trimannose. No such water is found for the reducing or O-6-linked mannose. Our data indicate that the central mannose of Man(alpha1-3)[Man(alpha1-6)]Man(alpha1-O)Me primarily functions as a hinge between the two outer subsites.  相似文献   

6.
The possible modes of binding of kojibiose, nigerose, maltose and ManPα(1 → 2)Man to concanavalin A have been investigated using computer modelling studies. While α12 linked disaccharides bind to concanavalin A in two modes,i.e. by placing the reducing as well as non-reducing sugar units in the sugar binding site, nigerose or maltose can bind only in one mode,i.e. by placing the non-reducing sugar unit in the binding site. Though, both the sugar residues in α 12 linked disaccharides can reach the binding site, the preference is high for the non-reducing unit. When the non-reducing residue, in any of these disaccharides, enters the binding site, the allowed orientations and the possible hydrogen bonds with the protein seem to be independent of the glycosidic linkage. However, the number of hydrogen bonds the outward sugar residue forms with the protein are dependent on the type of linkage. Atleast one of the hydroxyl groups adjacent to the glycosidic linkage on the outward sugar residue is involved in the formation of a hydrogen bond with the protein suggesting the presence of an extended binding site. The orientation of the reducing sugar residue in the extended binding site is dependent on the linkage. Its orientation in nigerose is flipped when compared to that found in kojibiose or maltose leading to different non-covalent interactions with the protein which affect their binding affinities.  相似文献   

7.
Moothoo  DN; Naismith  JH 《Glycobiology》1998,8(2):173-181
Carbohydrate recognition by proteins is a key event in many biological processes. Concanavalin A is known to specifically recognize the pentasaccharide core (beta-GlcNAc-(1-->2)-alpha- Man-(1-->3)-[beta- GlcNAc-(1-->2)-alpha-Man-(1-->6)]-Man) of N-linked oligosaccharides with a Ka of 1.41 x 10(6 )M-1. We have determined the structure of concanavalin A bound to beta-GlcNAc-(1-->2)-alpha-Man-(1-->3)-[beta- GlcNAc-(1-->2)-alpha-Man- (1-->6)]-Man to 2.7A. In six of eight subunits there is clear density for all five sugar residues and a well ordered binding site. The pentasaccharide adopts the same conformation in all eight subunits. The binding site is a continuous extended cleft on the surface of the protein. Van der Waals interactions and hydrogen bonds anchor the carbohydrate to the protein. Both GlcNAc residues contact the protein. The GlcNAc on the 1-->6 arm of the pentasaccharide makes particularly extensive contacts and including two hydrogen bonds. The binding site of the 1-->3 arm GlcNAc is much less extensive. Oligosaccharide recognition by Con A occurs through specific protein carbohydrate interactions and does not require recruitment of adventitious water molecules. The beta-GlcNAc-(1-->2)-Man glycosidic linkage PSI torsion angle on the 1-->6 arm is rotated by over 50 degrees from that observed in solution. This rotation is coupled to disruption of interactions at the monosaccharide site. We suggest destabilization of the monosaccharide site and the conformational strain reduces the free energy liberated by additional interactions at the 1-->6 arm GlcNAc site.   相似文献   

8.
The crystal structure of Pterocarpus angolensis lectin is determined in its ligand-free state, in complex with the fucosylated biantennary complex type decasaccharide NA2F, and in complex with a series of smaller oligosaccharide constituents of NA2F. These results together with thermodynamic binding data indicate that the complete oligosaccharide binding site of the lectin consists of five subsites allowing the specific recognition of the pentasaccharide GlcNAc beta(1-2)Man alpha(1-3)[GlcNAc beta(1-2)Man alpha(1-6)]Man. The mannose on the 1-6 arm occupies the monosaccharide binding site while the GlcNAc residue on this arm occupies a subsite that is almost identical to that of concanavalin A (con A). The core mannose and the GlcNAc beta(1-2)Man moiety on the 1-3 arm on the other hand occupy a series of subsites distinct from those of con A.  相似文献   

9.
Molecular dynamics simulations of the Man alpha 1----2Man alpha glycosidic linkage found in the N-linked glycans of glycoproteins were performed in vacuo and in the presence of water. In the latter case significant dampening of the molecular fluctuations was found when compared to the in vacuo simulation. A 500-ps dynamics simulation in water showed only occasional short-lived deviations from the minimum-energy conformation, more consistent with carbohydrate "breathing" than flexibility. These studies add further evidence that oligosaccharides can maintain "fixed" geometries with relatively long lifetimes and are in agreement with experimental NMR-derived parameters for the same linkage in oligomannose structures.  相似文献   

10.
Human beta-hexosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.52) is a lysosomal enzyme that hydrolyzes terminal N-acetylhexosamines from GM2 ganglioside, oligosaccharides, and other carbohydrate-containing macromolecules. There are two major forms of hexosaminidase: hexosaminidase A, with the structure alpha(beta a beta b), and hexosaminidase B, 2(beta a beta b). Like other lysosomal proteins, hexosaminidase is targeted to its destination via glycosylation and processing in the rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Phosphorylation of specific mannose residues allows binding of the protein to the phosphomannosyl receptor and transfer to the lysosome. In order to define the structure and placement of the oligosaccharides in mature hexosaminidase and thus identify candidate mannose 6-phosphate recipient sites, the major tryptic/chymotryptic glycopeptides from each isozyme were purified by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Two major concanavalin A binding glycopeptides, localized to the beta b chain, and one non concanavalin A binding glycopeptide, localized to the beta a chain, were found associated with the beta-subunit in both hexosaminidase A and hexosaminidase B. A single major concanavalin A binding glycopeptide was found to be associated with the alpha subunit of hexosaminidase A. The oligosaccharide structures were determined by nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry. Two of them, the alpha and one of the beta b glycans, contained a Man3-GlcNAc2 structure, while the remaining one on the beta b chain was composed of a mixture of Man5-7-GlcNAc2 glycans. The unique glycopeptide associated with the beta a chain contained a single GlcNAc residue. Thus, all three mature polypeptides comprising the alpha and beta subunits of hexosaminidase contain carbohydrate, the structures of which have the appearance of being partially degraded in the lysosome. In the alpha chain we found only one possible site for in vivo phosphorylation. In the beta it is unclear if only one or all three of the sites could have contained phosphate. However, mature placental hexosaminidase A and B can be rephosphorylated in vitro. This requires the presence of an oligosaccharide containing an alpha 1,2-linked mannose residue. Only the single Man6-7 (of the Man5-7-GlcNAc2 glycans) containing site on the beta b chain retains this type of residue. Therefore, this site may act as the sole in vitro substrate in both of the mature isozymes for the phosphotransferase.  相似文献   

11.
By using near-UV circular dichroism (CD) and solvent proton nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion measurements, three different conformational states have been detected in Ca(2+)-Mn(2+)-concanavalin A upon binding a variety of asparagine-linked carbohydrates. Two of these transitions have been described previously, one for the binding of monosaccharides such as methyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside and oligosaccharides with terminal alpha-Glc or alpha-Man residues, and the second for the binding of oligomannose and complex type carbohydrates (Brewer, C. F., and Bhattacharyya, L. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 7306-7310). The third transition occurs upon binding a bisected biantennary complex type carbohydrate with terminal GlcNAc residues. Temperature-dependent nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion and CD measurements have identified regions of the protein near the two metal ion binding sites that are associated with the conformation changes, and Tyr-12, which is part of the monosaccharide binding site, as responsible for the CD changes. The results support our previous conclusions that the rotamer conformation of the (alpha 1,6) arm of bisected complex type oligosaccharides binds to concanavalin A with dihedral angle omega = -60 degrees whereas nonbisected complex type oligosaccharides bind with omega = 180 degrees (Bhattacharyya, L., Haraldsson, M., and Brewer, C. F. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1294-1299). The present findings also explain the effects of increasing chain length of bisected complex type carbohydrates on their interactions with the lectin.  相似文献   

12.
The crystal structure of the Man/Glc-specific seed lectin from Pterocarpus angolensis was determined in complex with methyl-alpha-d-glucose, sucrose, and turanose. The carbohydrate binding site contains a classic Man/Glc type specificity loop. Its metal binding loop on the other hand is of the long type, different from what is observed in other Man/Glc-specific legume lectins. Glucose binding in the primary binding site is reminiscent of the glucose complexes of concanavalin A and lentil lectin. Sucrose is found to be bound in a conformation similar as seen in the binding site of lentil lectin. A direct hydrogen bond between Ser-137(OG) to Fru(O2) in Pterocarpus angolensis lectin replaces a water-mediated interaction in the equivalent complex of lentil lectin. In the turanose complex, the binding site of the first molecule in the asymmetric unit contains the alphaGlc1-3betaFruf form of furanose while the second molecule contains the alphaGlc1-3betaFrup form in its binding site.  相似文献   

13.
The probable modes of binding for methyl-α-d-sophoroside, methyl-β-d-sophoroside, laminariboise and cellobiose to concanavalin A have been determined using theoretical methods. Methyl-d-sophorosides can bind to concanavalin A in two modes, i.e. by placing their reducing as well as non-reducing sugar units in the carbohydrate specific binding site, whereas laminaribiose and cellobiose can reach the binding site only with their non-reducing glucose units. However, the probability for methyl-α-d-sophoroside to bind to concanavalin A with its reducing sugar residue as the occupant of the binding site is much higher than it is with its non-reducing sugar residue as the occupant of the sugar binding site. A few of the probable conformers of methyl-β-d-sophoroside can bind to concanavalin A with either the reducing or non-reducing glucose unit. Higher energy conformers of cellobiose or laminaribiose can reach the binding site with their non-reducing residues alone. The relative differences in the binding affinities of these disaccharides are mainly due to the differences in the availability of proper conformers which can reach the binding site and to non-covalent interactions between the sugar and the protein. This study also suggests that though the sugar binding site of concanavalin A accommodates a single sugar residue, the residue outwards from the binding site also interacts with concanavalin A, indicating the existence of extended concanavalin A carbohydrate interactions.  相似文献   

14.
Effective surface immobilization is a prerequisite for numerous carbohydrate-related studies including carbohydrate-biomolecule interactions. In the present work, we report a simple and rapid modification technique for diverse carbohydrate types in which direct oriented immobilization onto a gold surface is accomplished by coupling the amine group of a thiol group-bearing aminophenyl disulfide as a new coupling reagent with an aldehyde group of the terminal reducing sugar in the carbohydrate. To demonstrate the generality of this proposed reductive amination method, we examined its use for three types of carbohydrates: glucose (monosaccharide), lactose (disaccharide), and GM1 pentasaccharide. Through successful mass identifications of the modified carbohydrates, direct binding assays on gold surface using surface plasmon resonance and electrochemical methods, and a terminal galactose-binding lectin assay using atomic force microscopy, we confirmed several advantages including direct and rapid one-step immobilization onto a gold surface and exposure of functional carbohydrate moieties through oriented modification of the terminal reducing sugar. Therefore, this facile modification and immobilization method can be successfully used for diverse biomimetic studies of carbohydrates, including carbohydrate-biomolecule interactions and carbohydrate sensor or array development for diagnosis and screening.  相似文献   

15.
Different sugars, Gal, GalNAc and Man were docked at the monosaccharide binding sites of Erythrina corallodenron (EcorL), peanut lectin (PNA), Lathyrus ochrus (LOLI), and pea lectin (PSL). To study the lectin-carbohydrate interactions, in the complexes, the hydroxymethyl group in Man and Gal favors, gg and gt conformations respectively, and is the dominant recognition determination. The monosaccharide binding site in lectins that are specific to Gal/GalNAc is wider due to the additional amino acid residues in loop D as compared to that in lectins specific to Man/Glc, and affects the hydrogen bonds of the sugar involving residues from loop D, but not its orientation in the binding site. The invariant amino acid residues Asp from loop A, and Asn and an aromatic residue (Phe or Tyr) in loop C provides the basic architecture to recognize the common features in C4 epimers. The invariant Gly in loop B together with one or two residues in the variable region of loop D/A holds the sugar tightly at both ends. Loss of any one of these hydrogen bonds leads to weak interaction. While the subtle variations in the sequence and conformation of peptide fragment that resulted due to the size and location of gaps present in amino acid sequence in the neighborhood of the sugar binding site of loop D/A seems to discriminate the binding of sugars which differ at C4 atom (galacto and gluco configurations). The variations at loop B are important in discriminating Gal and GalNAc binding. The present study thus provides a structural basis for the observed specificities of legume lectins which uses the same four invariant residues for binding. These studies also bring out the information that is important for the design/engineering of proteins with the desired carbohydrate specificity.  相似文献   

16.
To explore the molecular basis of antigen recognition by germline antibodies, we have determined to high resolution the structures of the near-germline monoclonal antibody S25-2 in complex with seven distinct carbohydrate antigens based on the bacterial sugar 3-deoxy-α-d-manno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo). In contrast to previous findings, the inherited germline Kdo monosaccharide binding site is not restricted to this bacterial sugar but is able to accommodate an array of substitutions and chemical modifications of Kdo, including naturally occurring antigens containing the related monosaccharide d-glycero-α-d-talo-oct-2-ulosonic acid as well as nonterminal Kdo residues. However, we show by surface plasmon resonance and ELISA how antibody S25-2 specificity is so dependent on the context in which the antigen is presented that a free disaccharide displays strong binding while the same lipid-A-bound disaccharide does not bind. These structures provide insight into how inherited germline genes code for immunoglobulins of limited flexibility that are capable of binding a range of epitopes from which affinity-matured antibodies are generated.  相似文献   

17.
The complex of Maclura pomifera agglutinin with the T-antigen disaccharide (beta-d-Gal-(1-->3)-alpha-d-GalNAc-(1-->O)-Me) was investigated by NMR spectroscopy in aqueous solution. Intramolecular transferred nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) effects between the monosaccharide moieties were used to derive the ligand conformation in the lectin-bound state. Ligand protons in contact with the protein were identified by saturation transfer difference experiments and intermolecular transferred NOE effects. It is demonstrated that structural differences exist for the ligand-lectin complex in aqueous solution as compared with the previously published crystal structure (Lee, X., Thompson, A., Zhiming, Z., Ton-that, H., Biesterfeldt, J., Ogata, C., Xu, L., Johnston, R. A. Z. , and Young, N. M. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 6312-6318). In order to accommodate the O-methyl group of the disaccharide, the amino acid side chain of Tyr-122 has to rotate from its position in the crystal. The NMR data are in accord with two conformational families at the beta-(1-->3)glycosidic linkage in the solution complex with interglycosidic angles phi/psi = 45/-65 degrees and -65/-18 degrees. These differ from the bound conformation of the ligand in the crystal (phi/psi = 39/-8 degrees ) and are not highly populated by the ligand in the free state. The reason for the structural differences at the beta-(1-->3)glycosidic linkage are hydrogen bonds that stabilize the relative orientation of the monosaccharide units in the crystal. Our results demonstrate that the crystallization of a protein-carbohydrate complex can interfere with the delicate process of carbohydrate recognition in solution.  相似文献   

18.
Synthetic mono- and disaccharide derivatives of moraprenyl pyrophosphate were studied as mannose acceptors during the assembly of the repeating unit Rha-Man-Man-Gal of the Salmonella newport (serogroup C2) and S. kentucky (serogroup C3) O-antigens. Mannosyl transferases revealed strict specificity towards the configuration of terminal monosaccharide residue at C1 as well as to the type of linkage between monosaccharide residues in the disaccharide acceptor. The specificity of mannosyl transferases towards the structure of subterminal monosaccharide was not absolute. Alpha-D-Glucose and alpha-D-mannose derivatives were found not to serve as mannosyl residue acceptors, whereas those of alpha-D-talose, alpha-D-fucose, 4-deoxy-D-xylo-hexose and Man (alpha 1-3) glucose were substrates in enzymatic mannosylation with formation of polyprenyl pyrophosphate trisaccharides. These derivatives could serve as substrates for two subsequent enzymatic reactions: rhamnosylation and polymerization of the repeating units, yielding 40-60% of the polysaccharides.  相似文献   

19.
Sue SC  Brisson JR  Chang SC  Huang WN  Lee SC  Jarrell HC  Wu W 《Biochemistry》2001,40(35):10436-10446
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) have been suggested to be a potential target for cobra cardiotoxin (CTX) with high affinity and specificity via a cationic belt at the concave surface of the polypeptide. The interaction of GAGs, such as high-molecular weight heparin, with CTXs not only can induce aggregation of CTX molecules but also can enhance their penetration into membranes. The binding of short chain heparin, such as a heparin-derived disaccharide [DeltaUA2S(1-->4)-alpha-D-GlcNS6S], to CTX A3 from Taiwan cobra (Naja atra), however, will not induce aggregation and was, therefore, investigated by high-resolution (1)H NMR. A novel heparin binding site on the convex side of the CTX, near the rigid disulfide bond-tightened core region of Cys38, was identified due to the observation of intermolecular NOEs between the protein and carbohydrate. The derived carbohydrate conformation using complete relaxation and conformational exchange matrix analysis (CORCEMA) of NOEs indicated that the glycosidic linkage conformation and the ring conformation of the unsaturated uronic acid in the bound state depended significantly on the charge context of CTX molecules near the binding site. Specifically, comparative binding studies of several heparin disaccharide homologues with two CTX homologues (CTX Tgamma from Naja nigricollis and CTX A3) indicated that the electrostatic interaction of N-sulfate of glucosamine with NH(3)(+)zeta of Lys12 and of the 2-O-sulfate of the unsaturated uronic acid with NH(3)(+)zeta of Lys5 played an important role. These results also suggest a model on how the CTX-heparin interaction may regulate heparin-induced aggregation of the toxin via the second heparin binding site.  相似文献   

20.
The sexuality-inducing glycoprotein of Volvox carteri f. nagariensis was purified from supernatants of disintegrated sperm packets of the male strain IPS-22 and separated by reverse-phase HPLC into several isoforms which differ in the degree of O-glycosylation. Total chemical deglycosylation with trifluoromethanesulphonic acid yields the biologically inactive core protein of 22.5 kDa. This core protein possesses three putative binding sites for N-glycans which are clustered in the middle of the polypeptide chain. The N-glycosidically bound oligosaccharides were obtained by glycopeptidase F digestion and were shown by a combination of exoglycosidase digestion, gaschromatographic sugar analysis and two-dimensional HPLC separation to possess the following definite structures: (A) Man beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-4GlcNAc; (B) (Man alpha)3 Man beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-4GlcNAc Xyl beta; (C) (Man alpha)2 Man beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-4GlcNAc; (D) (Man)2Xyl(GlcNAc)2. Xyl beta Two of the three N-glycosidic binding sites carry one B and one D glycan. The A and C glycans are shared by the third N-glycosylation site. The O-glycosidic sugars, which make up 50% of the total carbohydrate, are short (up to three sugar residues) chains composed of Ara, Gal and Xyl and are exclusively bound to Thr residues.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号