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Monovalent Interactions of Galectin-1
Author(s) -
Emma Salomonsson,
Amaia Larumbe,
Johan Tejler,
Erik Tullberg,
Hanna A. Rydberg,
Anders Sundin,
A. Khabut,
Torbjörn Frejd,
Yuri D. Lobsanov,
James M. Rini,
Ulf J. Nilsson,
Hakon Leffler
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.43
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1520-4995
pISSN - 0006-2960
DOI - 10.1021/bi1009584
Subject(s) - glycoconjugate , galectin , chemistry , divalent , lectin , fetuin , glycoprotein , binding site , fluorescence , biochemistry , plasma protein binding , small molecule , biophysics , fluorescence anisotropy , binding selectivity , biology , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , membrane
Galectin-1, a β-galactoside binding lectin involved in immunoregulation and cancer, binds natural and many synthetic multivalent glycoconjugates with an apparent glycoside cluster effect, that is, affinity above and beyond what would be expected from the concentration of the determinant sugar. Here we have analyzed the mechanism of such cluster effects in solution at physiological concentration using a fluorescence anisotropy assay with a novel fluorescent high-affinity galectin-1 binding probe. The interaction of native dimeric and monomeric mutants of rat and human galectin-1 with mono- and divalent small molecules, fetuin, asialofetuin, and human serum glycoproteins was analyzed. Surprisingly, high-affinity binding did not depend much on the dimeric state of galectin-1 and thus is due mainly to monomeric interactions of a single carbohydrate recognition domain. The mechanism for this is unknown, but one possibility includes additional interactions that high-affinity ligands make with an extended binding site on the carbohydrate recognition domain. It follows that such weak additional interactions must be important for the biological function of galectin-1 and also for the design of galectin-1 inhibitors.

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