2e7q Citations

Generation of blood group specificity: new insights from structural studies on the complexes of A- and B-reactive saccharides with basic winged bean agglutinin.

Proteins 68 762-9 (2007)
Related entries: 1wbl, 2dtw, 2dty, 2du0, 2du1, 2e51, 2e53, 2e7t

Cited: 9 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 17510954

Abstract

Basic winged bean agglutinin binds A-blood group substance with higher affinity and B-blood group substance with lesser affinity. It does not bind the O substance. The crystal structures of the lectin, complexed with A-reactive and B-reactive di and tri saccharides, have been determined. In addition, the complexes of the lectin with fucosylated A-trisaccharides and B-trisaccharides and with a variant of the A-trisaccharide have been modeled. These structures and models provide valuable insights into the structural basis of blood group specificities. All the four carbohydrate binding loops of the lectin contribute to the primary combining site while the loop of variable length contributes to the secondary binding site. In a significant advance to the current understanding, the interactions at the secondary binding site also contribute substantially, albeit in a subtle manner, to determine the blood group specificity. Compared with the interactions of the B-trisaccharide with the lectin, the third sugar residue of the A-reactive trisacharide forms an additional hydrogen bond with a lysine residue in the variable loop. In the former, the formation of such a hydrogen bond is prevented by a shift in the orientation of third sugar resulting from an internal hydrogen bond in it. The formation of this bond is also facilitated by an interaction dependent change in the rotamer conformation of the lysyl residue of the variable loop. Thus, the difference in the interactions at the secondary site is generated by coordinated movements in the ligand as well as the protein. A comparison of the crystal structure and the model of the complex involving the variant of the A-trisaccharide results in the delineation of the relative contributions of the interactions at the primary and the secondary sites in determining blood group specificity.

Articles citing this publication (9)

  1. Divergent modes of glycan recognition by a new family of carbohydrate-binding modules. Gregg KJ, Finn R, Abbott DW, Boraston AB. J Biol Chem 283 12604-12613 (2008)
  2. Blood group antigen recognition by a solute-binding protein from a serotype 3 strain of Streptococcus pneumoniae. Higgins MA, Abbott DW, Boulanger MJ, Boraston AB. J Mol Biol 388 299-309 (2009)
  3. Identification of preferred carbohydrate binding modes in xenoreactive antibodies by combining conformational filters and binding site maps. Agostino M, Sandrin MS, Thompson PE, Yuriev E, Ramsland PA. Glycobiology 20 724-735 (2010)
  4. Structure, dynamics, and interactions of jacalin. Insights from molecular dynamics simulations examined in conjunction with results of X-ray studies. Sharma A, Sekar K, Vijayan M. Proteins 77 760-777 (2009)
  5. Identification of mycobacterial lectins from genomic data. Abhinav KV, Sharma A, Vijayan M. Proteins 81 644-657 (2013)
  6. The sequence and structure of snake gourd (Trichosanthes anguina) seed lectin, a three-chain nontoxic homologue of type II RIPs. Sharma A, Pohlentz G, Bobbili KB, Jeyaprakash AA, Chandran T, Mormann M, Swamy MJ, Vijayan M. Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 69 1493-1503 (2013)
  7. Peptide inhibitors of xenoreactive antibodies mimic the interaction profile of the native carbohydrate antigens. Agostino M, Sandrin MS, Thompson PE, Ramsland PA, Yuriev E. Biopolymers 96 193-206 (2011)
  8. Structure, interactions and evolutionary implications of a domain-swapped lectin dimer from Mycobacterium smegmatis. Patra D, Mishra P, Surolia A, Vijayan M. Glycobiology 24 956-965 (2014)
  9. Cloning, expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray studies of a secreted lectin (Rv1419) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Patra D, Srikalaivani R, Misra A, Singh DD, Singh DD, Selvaraj M, Vijayan M. Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun 66 1662-1665 (2010)


Related citations provided by authors (2)

  1. Structural basis for the carbohydrate-specificity of basic winged-bean lectin and its differential affinity for Gal and GalNAc.. Kulkarni KA, Katiyar S, Surolia A, Vijayan M, Suguna K Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 62 1319-24 (2006)
  2. Carbohydrate specificity and quaternary association in basic winged bean lectin: X-ray analysis of the lectin at 2.5 A resolution.. Prabu MM, Sankaranarayanan R, Puri KD, Sharma V, Surolia A, Vijayan M, Suguna K J Mol Biol 276 787-96 (1998)