Abstract

While adaptive immunity recognizes a nearly infinite range of antigenic determinants, immune tolerance renders adaptive immunity vulnerable to microbes decorated in self-like antigens. Recent studies suggest that sugar-binding proteins galectin-4 and galectin-8 bind microbes expressing blood group antigens. However, the binding profile and potential antimicrobial activity of other galectins, particularly galectin-9 (Gal-9), has remained incompletely defined. Here, we demonstrate that while Gal-9 possesses strong binding preference for ABO(H) blood group antigens, each domain exhibits distinct binding patterns, with the C-terminal domain (Gal-9C) exhibiting higher binding to blood group B than the N-terminal domain (Gal-9N). Despite this binding preference, Gal-9 readily killed blood group B–positive Escherichia coli, whereas Gal-9N displayed higher killing activity against this microbe than Gal-9C. Utilization of microarrays populated with blood group O antigens from a diverse array of microbes revealed that Gal-9 can bind various microbial glycans, whereas Gal-9N and Gal-9C displayed distinct and overlapping binding preferences. Flow cytometric examination of intact microbes corroborated the microbial glycan microarray findings, demonstrating that Gal-9, Gal-9N, and Gal-9C also possess the capacity to recognize distinct strains of Providencia alcalifaciens and Klebsiella pneumoniae that express mammalian blood group–like antigens while failing to bind related strains that do not express mammalian-like glycans. In each case of microbial binding, Gal-9, Gal-9N, and Gal-9C induced microbial death. In contrast, while Gal-9, Gal-9N, and Gal-9C engaged red blood cells, each failed to induce hemolysis. These data suggest that Gal-9 recognition of distinct microbial strains may provide antimicrobial activity against molecular mimicry.

Highlights

  • ABO blood group antigen polymorphisms provide one of the first recognized examples of immunological tolerance within adaptive immunity [10,11]

  • Galectin-4 (Gal-4) and galectin-8 provide antimicrobial activity against molecular (Gal-8), which are expressed along the mimicry

  • We examined the binding specificity and antimicrobial activity of full-length Gal-9 and each of its individual domains, as Gal-9 is a tandem repeat galectin consisting of two distinct carbohydrate recognition domains (CRDs)

Read more

Summary

Consistent with the lack of binding observed

Journal Pre-proof Gal-9, Gal-9N and Gal-9C recognize and kill distinct strains of K. pneumoniae and P. alcalifaciens. Toward common leukocyte ligands, such as polyLacNAc, in addition to blood group antigens, Previous glycan array studies indicate that over a similar concentration range may reflect a extended LacNAc structures are preferred glycans dual role for Gal-9 and perhaps other galectins in recognized by Gal-9, and that Gal-9 binding can directly targeting microbes while providing a be enhanced with terminal LacNAc modifications galectin-mediated regulation of leukocyte [19,24].

Galectin biotinylation was achieved by incubating
Glycan microarrays
Galectin antimicrobial assay
Whole cell galectin binding assay by flow cytometry
Galectin binding to RBCs and hemolysis assay
Figure Legends
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.