Abstract

CEL-III is a Ca(2+)-dependent hemolytic lectin, isolated from the marine invertebrate Cucumaria echinata. The three-dimensional structure of CEL-III/GalNAc and CEL-III/methyl alpha-galactoside complexes was solved by x-ray crystallographic analysis. In these complexes, five carbohydrate molecules were found to be bound to two carbohydrate-binding domains (domains 1 and 2) located in the N-terminal 2/3 portion of the polypeptide and that contained beta-trefoil folds similar to ricin B-chain. The 3-OH and 4-OH of bound carbohydrate molecules were coordinated with Ca(2+) located at the subdomains 1alpha, 1gamma, 2alpha, 2beta, and 2gamma, simultaneously forming hydrogen bond networks with nearby amino acid side chains, which is similar to carbohydrate binding in C-type lectins. The binding of carbohydrates was further stabilized by aromatic amino acid residues, such as tyrosine and tryptophan, through a stacking interaction with the hydrophobic face of carbohydrates. The importance of amino acid residues in the carbohydrate-binding sites was confirmed by the mutational analyses. The orientation of bound GalNAc and methyl alpha-galactoside was similar to the galactose moiety of lactose bound to the carbohydrate-binding site of the ricin B-chain, although the ricin B-chain does not require Ca(2+) ions for carbohydrate binding. The binding of the carbohydrates induced local structural changes in carbohydrate-binding sites in subdomains 2alpha and 2beta. Binding of GalNAc also induced a slight change in the main chain structure of domain 3, which could be related to the conformational change upon binding of specific carbohydrates to induce oligomerization of the protein.

Highlights

  • CEL-III is a hemolytic lectin isolated from the sea cucumber Cucumaria echinata (1, 2)

  • In addition to hemolytic activity, this lectin exhibits a strong cytotoxicity for some cultured cell lines, which is caused by formation of oligomers in the cell membrane (5, 6)

  • It was observed that the binding of the carbohydrates induced local structural changes in carbohydrate-binding sites and domain 3 that could be related to the conformational change upon binding to cell surface carbohydrates, which leads to oligomerization of the protein in cell membranes (4)

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Summary

Ra merge

Refinement statistics Resolution Protein atoms Ligand atoms Water molecule Rwork/Rfree (%) Root mean square deviations Bond lengths Bond angles Average B-factor (Å2) Protein atoms Carbohydrate Water. 19.5 Å2 22.5 Å2 28.2 Å2 a Rmerge ϭ 100⌺͉I ϪI͘/⌺I, where I is the observed intensity andIis the average intensity of multiple observations of symmetry-related reflections

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
GalNAc complex is illustrated in
Findings
Carbohydrate Subdomain
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