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1.
Biochimie ; 187: 48-56, 2021 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34022292

ABSTRACT

Glycans of cellular glycoconjugates serve as biochemical signals for a multitude of (patho)physiological processes via binding to their receptors (e.g. lectins). In the case of human adhesion/growth-regulatory galectin-1 (Gal-1), small angle neutron scattering and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy have revealed a significant decrease of its gyration radius and increase of its diffusion coefficient upon binding lactose, posing the pertinent question on the nature and region(s) involved in the underlying structural alterations. Requiring neither a neutron source nor labeling, diffusion measurements by 1H NMR spectroscopy are shown here to be sufficiently sensitive to detect this ligand-induced change. In order to figure out which region(s) of Gal-1 is (are) affected at the level of peptides, we first explored the use of H/D exchange mass spectrometry (HDX MS). Hereby, we found a reduction in proton exchange kinetics beyond the lactose-binding site. The measurement of fast HN/H2O exchange by phase-modulated NMR clean chemical exchange (CLEANEX) NMR on 15N-labeled Gal-1 then increased the spatial resolution to the level of individual amino acids. The mapped regions with increased protection from HN/H2O (D2O) exchange that include the reduction of solvent exposure around the interface can underlie the protein's compaction. These structural changes have potential to modulate this galectin's role in lattice formation on the cell surface and its interaction(s) with protein(s) at the F-face.


Subject(s)
Galectin 1/chemistry , Deuterium Exchange Measurement , Humans , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(8): 2837-2842, 2019 02 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30718416

ABSTRACT

Glycan-lectin recognition is assumed to elicit its broad range of (patho)physiological functions via a combination of specific contact formation with generation of complexes of distinct signal-triggering topology on biomembranes. Faced with the challenge to understand why evolution has led to three particular modes of modular architecture for adhesion/growth-regulatory galectins in vertebrates, here we introduce protein engineering to enable design switches. The impact of changes is measured in assays on cell growth and on bridging fully synthetic nanovesicles (glycodendrimersomes) with a chemically programmable surface. Using the example of homodimeric galectin-1 and monomeric galectin-3, the mutual design conversion caused qualitative differences, i.e., from bridging effector to antagonist/from antagonist to growth inhibitor and vice versa. In addition to attaining proof-of-principle evidence for the hypothesis that chimera-type galectin-3 design makes functional antagonism possible, we underscore the value of versatile surface programming with a derivative of the pan-galectin ligand lactose. Aggregation assays with N,N'-diacetyllactosamine establishing a parasite-like surface signature revealed marked selectivity among the family of galectins and bridging potency of homodimers. These findings provide fundamental insights into design-functionality relationships of galectins. Moreover, our strategy generates the tools to identify biofunctional lattice formation on biomembranes and galectin-reagents with therapeutic potential.


Subject(s)
Galectin 1/chemistry , Galectin 3/chemistry , Glycoconjugates/chemistry , Polysaccharides/chemistry , Amino Sugars/chemistry , Amino Sugars/metabolism , Binding Sites , Blood Proteins , Cell Adhesion/genetics , Cell Proliferation/genetics , Galectin 1/genetics , Galectin 3/genetics , Galectins , Humans , Lactose/chemistry , Ligands , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Polysaccharides/genetics
3.
Biochimie ; 146: 127-138, 2018 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29248541

ABSTRACT

Despite its natural abundance in lenses of vertebrates the physiological function(s) of the galectin-related inter-fiber protein (GRIFIN) is (are) still unclear. The same holds true for the significance of the unique interspecies (fish/birds vs mammals) variability in the capacity to bind lactose. In solution, ultracentrifugation and small angle X-ray scattering (at concentrations up to 9 mg/mL) characterize the protein as compact and stable homodimer without evidence for aggregation. The crystal structure of chicken (C-)GRIFIN at seven pH values from 4.2 to 8.5 is reported, revealing compelling stability. Binding of lactose despite the Arg71Val deviation from the sequence signature of galectins matched the otherwise canonical contact pattern with thermodynamics of an enthalpically driven process. Upon lactose accommodation, the side chain of Arg50 is shifted for hydrogen bonding to the 3-hydroxyl of glucose. No evidence for a further ligand-dependent structural alteration was obtained in solution by measuring hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometrically in peptic fingerprints. The introduction of the Asn48Lys mutation, characteristic for mammalian GRIFINs that have lost lectin activity, lets labeled C-GRIFIN maintain capacity to stain tissue sections. Binding is no longer inhibitable by lactose, as seen for the wild-type protein. These results establish the basis for detailed structure-activity considerations and are a step to complete the structural description of all seven members of the galectin network in chicken.


Subject(s)
Galectins/chemistry , Animals , Binding Sites , Carbohydrate Metabolism , Chickens , Crystallography, X-Ray , Galectins/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Protein Structure, Quaternary , Solutions
4.
Anal Chem ; 89(16): 8233-8237, 2017 08 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28700824

ABSTRACT

The usefulness of the higher-order structure information provided by hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) in the protein therapeutic field is undisputed; however, its applicability as a method for critical quality and comparability assessment has until now not been demonstrated. Here we present results demonstrating for the first time the applicability of the HDX-MS technique to monitor structural changes due to methionine oxidation at sensitivity levels realistic to the requirements of biopharmaceutical research and development. For the analyzed heavy chain marker peptides deuterium uptake differences due to oxidation at the conserved methionine in position 254 were significantly verifiable at the lowest increase (1%) through spiked oxidized IgG1.

5.
Chemistry ; 21(39): 13558-68, 2015 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26270612

ABSTRACT

The physiological significance arising from translating information stored in glycans into cellular effects explains the interest in structurally defining lectin-carbohydrate recognition. The relatively small set of adhesion/growth-regulatory galectins in chicken makes this system attractive to study the origins of specificity and divergence. Cell binding by using glycosylation mutants reveals binding of the N-terminal domain of chicken galectin-8 (CG-8N) to α-2,3-sialylated and galactose-terminated glycan chains. Cocrystals with lactose and its 3'-sialylated derivative disclose Arg58 as a key contact for the carboxylic acid and differences in loop lengths to the three homodimeric chicken galectins. Monitoring hydrogen-deuterium exchange by mass spectrometry revealed an effective reduction of deuteration after ligand binding within the contact area. In addition, evidence for changes in solvent accessibility of amide protons beyond this site was obtained. Their detection, which highlights the sensor capacity of this technique, encourages systematic studies on galectins and beyond.

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