Abstract

The seed lectin from Dioclea grandiflora and jack bean lectin concanavalin A (ConA) are both members of the Diocleinae subtribe of Leguminosae lectins. Both lectins have recently been shown to possess enhanced affinities and extended binding sites for the trisaccharide, 3,6-di-O-(alpha-D-mannopyranosyl)-D-mannose, which is present in the core region of all asparagine-linked carbohydrates (Gupta, D., Oscarson, S., Raju, S., Stanley, P. Toone, E. J. and Brewer, C. F. (1996) Eur. J. Biochem. 242, 320-326). In the present study, the binding specificities of seven other lectins from the Diocleinae subtribe have been investigated by hemagglutination inhibition and isothermal titration microcalorimetry (ITC). The lectins are from Canavalia brasiliensis, Canavalia bonariensis, Cratylia floribunda, Dioclea rostrata, Dioclea virgata, Dioclea violacea, and Dioclea guianensis. Hemagglutination inhibition and ITC experiments show that all seven lectins are Man/Glc-specific and have high affinities for the core trimannoside, like ConA and D. grandiflora lectin. All seven lectins also exhibit the same pattern of binding to a series of monodeoxy analogs and a tetradeoxy analog of the trimannoside, similar to that of ConA and D. grandiflora lectin. However, C. bonariensis, C. floribunda, D. rostrata, and D. violacea, like D. grandiflora, show substantially reduced affinities for a biantennary complex carbohydrate with terminal GlcNAc residues, while C. brasiliensis, D. guianensis, and D. virgata, like ConA, exhibit affinities for the oligosaccharide comparable with that of the trimannoside. Thermodynamic data obtained by ITC indicate different energetic mechanisms of binding of the above two groups of lectins to the complex carbohydrate. The ability of the lectins to induce histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells is shown to correlate with the relative affinities of the proteins for the biantennary carbohydrate.

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