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Structural analysis of two crystal forms of lentil lectin at 1.8 Å resolution
Author(s) -
Loris Remy,
van Overberge David,
DaoThi MinhHoa,
Poortmans Freddy,
Maene Norbert,
Wyns Lode
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.340200406
Subject(s) - lectin , orthorhombic crystal system , crystallography , chemistry , monosaccharide , hydrogen bond , crystal structure , binding site , biochemistry , molecule , organic chemistry
The structures of two crystal forms of lentil lectin are determined and refined at high resolution. Orthorhombic lentil lectin is refined at 1.80 Å resolution to an R ‐factor of 0.184 and monoclinic lentil lectin at 1.75 Å resolution to an R ‐factor of 0.175. These two structures are compared to each other and to the other available legume lectin structures. The monosaccharide binding pocket of each lectin monomer contains a tightly bound phosphate ion. This phosphate makes hydrogen bonding contacts with Asp‐81β, Gly‐99β, and Asn‐125β, three residues that are highly conserved in most of the known legume lectin sequences and essential for monosaccharide recognition in all legume lectin crystal structures described thus far. A detailed analysis of the composition and properties of the hydrophobic contact network and hydrophobic nuclei in lentil lectin is presented. Contact map calculations reveal that dense clusters of nonpolar as well as polar side chains playa major role in secondary structure packing. This is illustrated by a large cluster of 24 mainly hydrophobic amino acids that is responsible for the majority of packing interactions between the two β‐sheets. Another series of four smaller and less hydrophobic clusters is found to mediate the packing of a number of loop structures upon the front sheet. A very dense, but not very conserved cluster is found to stabilize the transition metal binding site. The highly conserved and invariant nonpolar residues are distributed asymmetrically over the protein. © 1994 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.