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1.
Dam TK  Brewer CF 《Biochemistry》2008,47(33):8470-8476
Many biological ligands are composed of clustered binding epitopes. However, the effects of clustered epitopes on the affinity of ligand-receptor interactions in many cases are not well understood. Clustered carbohydrate epitopes are present in naturally occurring multivalent carbohydrates and glycoproteins, which are receptors on the surface of cells. Recent studies have provided evidence that the enhanced affinities of lectins, which are carbohydrate binding proteins, for multivalent carbohydrates and glycoproteins are due to internal diffusion of lectin molecules from epitope to epitope in these multivalent ligands before dissociation. Indeed, binding of lectins to mucins, which are large linear glycoproteins, appears to be similar to the internal diffusion mechanism(s) of protein ligands binding to DNA, which have been termed the "bind and slide" or "bind and hop" mechanisms. The observed increasing negative cooperativity and gradient of decreasing microaffinity constants of a lectin binding to multivalent carbohydrates and glycoproteins result in an initial fraction of lectin molecules that bind with very high affinity and dynamic motion. These findings have important implications for the mechanisms of binding of lectins to mucins, and for other ligand-biopolymer interactions and clustered ligand-receptor systems in general.  相似文献   

2.
Cell surface multivalent ligands, such as proteoglycans and mucins, are often tethered by a single attachment point. In vitro, however, it is difficult to immobilize multivalent ligands at single sites due to their heterogeneity. Moreover, multivalent ligands often lack a single group with reactivity orthogonal to other functionality in the ligand. Biophysical analyses of multivalent ligand-receptor interactions would benefit from the availability of strategies for uniform immobilization of multivalent ligands. To this end, we report the design and synthesis of a multivalent ligand that has a single terminal orthogonal functional group and we demonstrate that this material can be selectively immobilized onto a surface suitable for surface plasmon resonance (SPR) experiments. The polymeric ligand we generated displays multiple copies of 3,6-disulfogalactose, and it can bind to the cell adhesion molecules P- and L-selectin. Using SPR measurements, we found that surfaces displaying our multivalent ligands bind specifically to P- and L-selectin. The affinities of P- and L-selectin for surfaces displaying the multivalent ligand are five- to sixfold better than the affinities for a surface modified with the corresponding monovalent ligand. In addition to binding soluble proteins, surfaces bearing immobilized polymers bound to cells displaying L-selectin. Cell binding was confirmed by visualizing adherent cells by fluorescence microscopy. Together, our results indicate that synthetic surfaces can be created by selective immobilization of multivalent ligands and that these surfaces are capable of binding soluble and cell-surface-associated receptors with high affinity.  相似文献   

3.
Temperature-dependent regulation of affinity binding between bioactive ligands and their cell membrane receptors is an attractive approach for the dynamic control of cellular adhesion, proliferation, migration, differentiation, and signal transduction. Covalent conjugation of bioactive ligands onto thermoresponsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PIPAAm)-grafted surfaces facilitates the modulation of one-on-one affinity binding between bioactive ligands and cellular receptors by changing temperature. For the dynamic control of the multivalent affinity binding between heparin and heparin-binding proteins, thermoresponsive cell culture surface modified with heparin, which interacts with heparin-binding proteins such as basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), has been proposed. Heparin-functionalized thermoresponsive cell culture surface induces (1) the multivalent affinity binding of bFGF in active form and (2) accelerating cell sheet formation in the state of shrunken PIPAAm chains at 37°C. By lowering temperature to 20°C, the affinity binding between bFGF and immobilized heparin is reduced with increasing the mobility of heparin and the swollen PIPAAm chains, leading to the detachment of cultured cells. Therefore, heparin-functionalized thermoresponsive cell culture surface was able to enhance cell proliferation and detach confluent cells as a contiguous cell sheet by changing temperature. A cell cultivation system using heparin-functionalized thermoresponsive cell culture surface is versatile for immobilizing other heparin-binding proteins such as vascular endothelial growth factor, fibronectin, antithrombin III, and hepatocyte growth factor, etc. for tuning the adhesion, growth, and differentiation of various cell species.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Monomeric sialyl Lewis(X) (sLe(x)) and sLe(x)-like oligosaccharides are minimal structures capable of supporting selectin binding in vitro. However, their weak binding interactions do not correlate with the high-affinity binding interactions witnessed in vivo. The polyvalent display of carbohydrate groups found on cell surface glycoprotein structures may contribute to the enhanced binding strength of selectin-mediated adhesion. Detailed biochemical analyses of physiological selectin ligands have revealed a complicated composition of molecules that bind to the selectins in vivo and suggest that there are other requirements for tight binding beyond simple carbohydrate multimerization. In an effort to mimic the high-affinity binding, polyvalent scaffolds that contain multicomponent displays of selectin-binding ligands have been synthesized. Here, we demonstrate that the presentation of additional anionic functional groups in the form of sulfate esters, on a polymerized liposome surface containing a multimeric array of sLe(x)-like oligosaccharides, generates a highly potent, bifunctional macromolecular assembly. This assembly inhibits L-, E-, and P-selectin binding to GlyCAM-1, a physiological ligand better than sLe(x)-like liposomes without additional anionic charge. These multivalent arrays are 4 orders of magnitude better than the monovalent carbohydrate. Liposomes displaying 3'-sulfo Lewis(X)-like oligosaccharides, on the other hand, show slight loss of binding with introduction of additional anionic functional groups for E- and P-selectin and negligible change for L-selectin. The ability to rapidly and systematically vary the composition of these assemblies is a distinguishing feature of this methodology and may be applied to the study of other systems where composite binding determinants are important for high-affinity binding.  相似文献   

6.
Information contained in the mammalian glycome is decoded by glycan-binding proteins (GBPs) that mediate diverse functions including host-pathogen interactions, cell trafficking and transmembrane signaling. Although information on the biological roles of GBPs is rapidly expanding, challenges remain in identifying the glycan ligands and their impact on GBP function. Protein-glycan interactions are typically low affinity, requiring multivalent interactions to achieve a biological effect. Though many glycoproteins can carry the glycan structure recognized by the GBP, other factors, such as recognition of protein epitopes and microdomain localization, may restrict which glycoproteins are functional ligands in situ. Recent advances in development of glycan arrays, synthesis of multivalent glycan ligands, bioengineering of cell-surface glycans and glycomics databases are providing new tools to identify the ligands of GBPs and to elucidate the mechanisms by which they participate in GBP function.  相似文献   

7.
Experimental evidence directly implicates complex carbohydrates in recognition processes, including adhesion between cells, adhesion of cells to the extracellular matrix, and specific recognition of cells by one another. In addition, carbohydrates are recognized as differentiation markers and as antigenic determinants. Lectins are nonenzymatic proteins present in plants and animals, which preferentially bind to specific carbohydrate structures and play an important role in cell recognition. Modified carbohydrates and oligosaccharides have the ability to interfere with carbohydrate-protein interactions and therefore, inhibit the cell-cell recognition and adhesion processes, which play an important role in cancer growth and progression. Carbohydrate ligands therefore, are candidates to play important roles in cancer therapeutics.  相似文献   

8.
Multivalent interactions occur frequently in nature, where they mediate high-affinity interactions between cells, proteins, or molecules. Here, we report on a method to generate multivalent aptamers (Multi-Aptamers) that target L-selectin function using rolling circle amplification (RCA). We find that the L-selectin Multi-Aptamers have increased affinity compared to the monovalent aptamer, are specific to L-selectin, and are capable of inhibiting interactions with endogenous ligands. In addition, the Multi-Aptamers efficiently inhibit L-selectin mediated dynamic adhesion in vitro and homing to secondary lymphoid tissues in vivo. Importantly, our method of generating multivalent materials using RCA avoids many of the challenges associated with current multivalent materials in that the Multi-Aptamers are high affinity, easily produced and modified, and biocompatible. We anticipate that the Multi-Aptamers can serve as a platform technology to modulate diverse cellular processes.  相似文献   

9.
Serum from rabbits and rats exposed to Ixodes dammini adults and larvae, respectively, contain antibodies to a large number of antigens in salivary gland homogenates from adult ticks that cross react with the antigens of a closely related species, Ixodes scapularis, and significantly with Dermacentor variabilis antigens. The salivary gland antigens of I. dammini are glycoproteins composed of both N- and O-linked carbohydrate chains. The antigenic determinants reside in both the polypeptide and carbohydrate chains.  相似文献   

10.
Engineered receptor fragments and glycoprotein ligands employed in different assay formats have been used to dissect the basis for the dramatic enhancement of binding of two model membrane receptors, dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN) and the macrophage galactose lectin, to glycoprotein ligands compared to simple sugars. These approaches make it possible to quantify the importance of two major factors that combine to enhance the affinity of single carbohydrate-recognition domains (CRDs) for glycoprotein ligands by 100-to 300-fold. First, the presence of extended binding sites within a single CRD can enhance interaction with branched glycans, resulting in increases of fivefold to 20-fold in affinity. Second, presentation of glycans on a glycoprotein surface increases affinity by 15-to 20-fold, possibly due to low-specificity interactions with the surface of the protein or restriction in the conformation of the glycans. In contrast, when solution-phase networking is avoided, enhancement due to binding of multiple branches of a glycan to multiple CRDs in the oligomeric forms of these receptors is minimal and binding of a receptor oligomer to multiple glycans on a single glycoprotein makes only a twofold contribution to overall affinity. Thus, in these cases, multivalent interactions of individual glycoproteins with individual receptor oligomers have a limited role in achieving high affinity. These findings, combined with considerations of membrane receptor geometry, are consistent with the idea that further enhancement of the binding to multivalent glycoprotein ligands requires interaction of multiple receptor oligomers with the ligands.  相似文献   

11.
Six animal plasma vitronectins, human, horse, porcine, bovine, rabbit and chicken vitronectins purified by a novel method using two successive heparin affinity columns, showed marked diversity in molecular weight, immunoreactivity and carbohydrate composition. Chicken vitronectin had a distinctly different amino acid composition from the mammalian vitronectins; and bovine vitronectin was the only one to contain N-glycolylneuraminic acid as well as N-acetylneuraminic acid. Binding studies with horseradish peroxidase-labelled lectins indicated that all the vitronectins contained complex-type, sialylated N-linked sugar chains and that only porcine vitronectin had a fucosylated sugar chain. D-Galactosamine determinations and binding studies with horseradish peroxidase-peanut lectin on native and asialovitronectins revealed that the mammalian vitronectins other than human vitronectin contained O-linked sugar chains with sialic acid, chicken vitronectin contained unsialylated chains, and human vitronectin contained neither. The results indicate that diversities in vitronectins are apparent in their molecular weights and glycosylations, especially in the number and structure of O-linked sugar chains.  相似文献   

12.
Affinity enhancement by multivalent lectin–carbohydrate interaction   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The binding of simple carbohydrate ligands by proteins often requires affinity enhancement to attain biologically relevant strength. This is especially true for endocytotic receptors and the molecules that engage in the first-line of defense. For such purposes, nature often utilizes a mode of affinity enhancement that arises from multiple interactions between the binding proteins and the carbohydrate ligands, which we term glycoside cluster effect. In this review article we give a number of examples and describe important factors in the multi-valent interactions that govern the degree of affinity enhancement.  相似文献   

13.
Glycan-mediated interactions are essential in many biological processes and regulate a wide variety of cellular functions. However, characterizing these interactions is difficult because glycan biosynthesis is not template driven and because carbohydrate recognition events are usually of low affinity and transient. Photocrosslinking carbohydrate probes can form a covalent bond with molecules in close proximity on UV irradiation and are capable of capturing interactions between glycans and glycan-binding proteins in situ. Because of these advantages, multiple photocrosslinking carbohydrate probes have been designed and applied to study the biological functions of glycans. This review will discuss recent advances in the development of novel photocrosslinking functional groups and the design of photocrosslinking probes to detect interactions mediated by glycolipids, peptidoglycan, and multivalent carbohydrate ligands. These probes have demonstrated the potential to address some of the major challenges in the study of glycan-mediated interactions in both model systems and in more complex biological settings.  相似文献   

14.
WE have raised a monoclonal antibody, designated E28D8, which reacts with an 80,000-dalton membrane glycoprotein (gp80) of Dictyostelium discoideum. gp80 has been implicated in the formation of the EDTA-resistant adhesions ("contact sites A") which appear during development. The monoclonal antibody reacted with other developmentally regulated proteins of D. discoideum, confirming previous results indicating the presence of common antigenic determinants recognized by polyclonal rabbit antibodies directed to gp80. Periodate sensitivity of the determinants suggests that carbohydrate may be necessary for reactivity. Thus, the determinant recognized by E28D8 may result from a posttranslational modification common to a number of proteins. Some of the proteins that carry the determinant were preferentially localized to posterior cells in slugs. Monoclonal antibody E28D8 did not inhibit contact-sites-A-mediated intercellular adhesion. However, gp80 affinity purified on immobilized monoclonal antibody was able to neutralize the adhesion-blocking effect of rabbit antiserum to gp80. Although gp80 itself may not be essential for cell-cell adhesion, it appears to carry the determinants associated with adhesion.  相似文献   

15.
S Gabius  H J Gabius 《Blut》1990,61(4):232-239
Intimate cellular contacts and coordinated supply of regulatory factors are required to maintain the still inexplicable dynamic equilibrium of hemopoiesis. To infer the potential participation of protein-carbohydrate interaction in this complex process, human long-term bone marrow cultures were initiated from eleven donors, and the adherent cell layer was characterized enzyme- and immunohistochemically. Utilizing an array of carrier-immobilized carbohydrate ligands and sulfated polysaccharides as probes, specific binding of various constituents of the carbohydrate chains of cellular glycoconjugates to the stromal cells was unmistakably disclosed. Biochemical analysis, employing glycocytologically effective ligands in affinity chromatography, corroborated this result. The extent of binding was markedly lower in the two samples, derived from leukemia patients. Pronounced adaptive responses for this characteristic followed changes in the culture microenvironment that are known to influence qualitative and quantitative aspects of hemopoiesis in vitro, namely omission of hydrocortisone and horse serum or addition of cytokines. Similarly, such adaptive modulation occurred on the level of accessible cell surface receptors, monitored by neoglycoenzymes. These binding sites can be involved in mediation of cellular interactions, as revealed in a model system by the interference of N-acetyl-D-galactosamine in cell adhesion. Overall, the results support the idea that glycobiological recognition may contribute to the functional integrity of the stromal cell layer as well as provide the basis for further analysis.  相似文献   

16.
The surface of all living cells is decorated with carbohydrate molecules. Hundreds of functional proteins bind to these glycosylated ligands; such binding events subsequently modulate many aspects of protein and cell function. Identifying ligands for glycan-binding proteins (GBPs) is a defining challenge of glycoscience research. Here, we review recent advances that are allowing protein-carbohydrate interactions to be dissected with an unprecedented level of precision. We specifically highlight how cell-based glycan arrays and glyco-genomic profiling are being used to define the structural determinants of glycan-protein interactions in living cells. Going forward, these methods create exciting new opportunities for the study of glycans in physiology and disease.  相似文献   

17.
Because carbohydrates and proteins bind with such low affinity, the nature of their interactions is not clear. Photoaffinity labeling with diazirin groups is useful for elucidating the roles of carbohydrates in these binding processes. However, when carbohydrate probes are synthesized according to this conventional method, the reducing terminus of the sugar is opened to provide an acyclic structure. Because greater elucidation of carbohydrate-protein interactions requires a closed-ring carbohydrate in addition to the photoreactive group, we synthesized new molecular tools. The carbohydrate ligands were synthesized in three steps (glycosylation with allyl alcohol, deprotection, and ozonolysis). Specific binding proteins for carbohydrate ligands were obtained by photoaffinity labeling. Closed ring-type carbohydrate ligands, in which the reducing sugar is closed, bound to lectins more strongly than open ring-type sugars. Carbohydrate to protein binding was observed using AFM.  相似文献   

18.
Numerous functions of heparan sulfate proteoglycans are mediated through interactions between their heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains and extracellular ligands. Ligand binding specificity for some molecules, including many growth factors, is determined by complex heparan sulfate fine structure, where highly sulfated, iduronate-rich domains alternate with N-acetylated domains. Syndecan-4, a cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, has a distinct role in cell adhesion, suggesting its chains may differ from those of other cell surface proteoglycans. To determine whether the specific role of syndecan-4 correlates with a distinct heparan sulfate structure, we have analyzed heparan sulfate chains from the different surface proteoglycans of a single fibroblast strain and compared their ability to bind the Hep II domain of fibronectin, a ligand known to promote focal adhesion formation through syndecan-4. Despite distinct molecular masses of glypican and syndecan glycosaminoglycans and minor differences in disaccharide composition and sulfation pattern, the overall proportion and distribution of sulfated regions and the affinity for the Hep II domain were similar. Therefore, adhesion regulation requires core protein determinants of syndecan-4.  相似文献   

19.
Mannose-binding proteins (MBPs) are C-type animal lectins that recognize high mannose oligosaccharides on pathogenic cell surfaces. MBPs bind to their carbohydrate ligands by forming a series of Ca(2+) coordination and hydrogen bonds with two hydroxyl groups equivalent to the 3- and 4-OH of mannose. In this work, the determinants of the orientation of sugars bound to rat serum and liver MBPs (MBP-A and MBP-C) have been systematically investigated. The crystal structures of MBP-A soaked with monosaccharides and disaccharides and also the structure of the MBP-A trimer cross-linked by a high mannose asparaginyl oligosaccharide reveal that monosaccharides or alpha1-6-linked mannose bind to MBP-A in one orientation, whereas alpha1-2- or alpha1-3-linked mannose binds in an orientation rotated 180 degrees around a local symmetry axis relating the 3- and 4-OH groups. In contrast, a similar set of ligands all bind to MBP-C in a single orientation. The mutation of MBP-A His(189) to its MBP-C equivalent, valine, causes Man alpha 1-3Man to bind in a mixture of orientations. These data combined with modeling indicate that the residue at this position influences the orientation of bound ligands in MBP. We propose that the control of binding orientation can influence the recognition of multivalent ligands. A lateral association of trimers in the cross-linked crystals may reflect interactions within higher oligomers of MBP-A that are stabilized by multivalent ligands.  相似文献   

20.
Rotaviruses are the most common cause of severe gastroenteritisin infants and children worldwide. Early events of virus bindingand entry are the critical determinants of cellular permissivenessto rotavirus replication. The only known ligands for rotavirusesare sialic acids. We now report that simian rotaviruses bindpreferentially to a subset of sialylated glycoconjugates, i.e.glycoproteins containing O-linked sialic acid moieties. Rotavirusesare able to distinguish between sialylated trisaccharide ligandspresented as neoglycolipids. Higher avidity binding by rotavirusesis explained by multivalent binding to clustered sialic acidmoieties. Our in vitro data are extended to explain the protectiveeffect of mucins in the murine model of rotavirus disease andthe specific binding by rotavirus to a high molecular weightsialomucin in the infant mouse intestine. Rotavirus bindingto a sialomucin may be analogous to selectin-mediated mechanismsof cellular adhesion, and may be advantageous to the virus inthe dynamic environment of the intestine. neoglycoconjugates receptor rotavirus sialic acids sialomucins  相似文献   

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