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Keywords
(9)
Adaptive Immunity
Antigen Presentation
Binding Site
Blood Groups
Cell Surface
Crystal Structure
Lipopolysaccharide
Carbohydrate Recognition Domain
langerhans cell
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Structural Basis for Langerin Recognition of Diverse Pathogen and Mammalian Glycans through a Single Binding Site
Structural Basis for Langerin Recognition of Diverse Pathogen and Mammalian Glycans through a Single Binding Site,10.1016/j.jmb.2010.11.039,Journal of
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Structural Basis for Langerin Recognition of Diverse Pathogen and Mammalian Glycans through a Single Binding Site
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Hadar Feinberg
,
Maureen E. Taylor
,
Nahid Razi
,
Ryan McBride
,
Yuriy A. Knirel
,
Sarah A. Graham
,
Kurt Drickamer
,
William I. Weis
Langerin mediates the carbohydrate-dependent uptake of pathogens by Langerhans cells in the first step of
antigen presentation
to the adaptive immune system. Langerin binds to an unusually diverse number of endogenous and pathogenic
cell surface
carbohydrates, including mannose-containing O-specific polysaccharides derived from bacterial lipopolysaccharides identified here by probing a microarray of bacterial polysaccharides. Crystal structures of the carbohydrate-recognition domain from human langerin bound to a series of oligomannose compounds, the blood group B antigen, and a fragment of β-glucan reveal binding to mannose, fucose, and glucose residues by Ca2+ coordination of vicinal hydroxyl groups with similar stereochemistry. Oligomannose compounds bind through a single mannose residue, with no other mannose residues contacting the protein directly. There is no evidence for a second Ca2+-independent binding site. Likewise, a β-glucan fragment, Glcβ1–3Glcβ1–3Glc, binds to langerin through the interaction of a single glucose residue with the Ca2+ site. The fucose moiety of the blood group B trisaccharide Galα1–3(Fucα1–2)Gal also binds to the Ca2+ site, and selective binding to this glycan compared to other fucose-containing oligosaccharides results from additional favorable interactions of the nonreducing terminal galactose, as well as of the fucose residue. Surprisingly, the equatorial 3-OH group and the axial 4-OH group of the galactose residue in 6SO4–Galβ1–4GlcNAc also coordinate Ca2+, a heretofore unobserved mode of galactose binding in a C-type carbohydrate-recognition domain bearing the Glu-Pro-Asn signature motif characteristic of mannose binding sites. Salt bridges between the sulfate group and two lysine residues appear to compensate for the nonoptimal binding of galactose at this site.
Journal:
Journal of Molecular Biology - J MOL BIOL
, vol. 405, no. 4, pp. 1027-1039, 2011
DOI:
10.1016/j.jmb.2010.11.039
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