Abstract

Mannose-binding proteins (MBPs) are C-type animal lectins that recognize high mannose oligosaccharides on pathogenic cell surfaces. MBPs bind to their carbohydrate ligands by forming a series of Ca(2+) coordination and hydrogen bonds with two hydroxyl groups equivalent to the 3- and 4-OH of mannose. In this work, the determinants of the orientation of sugars bound to rat serum and liver MBPs (MBP-A and MBP-C) have been systematically investigated. The crystal structures of MBP-A soaked with monosaccharides and disaccharides and also the structure of the MBP-A trimer cross-linked by a high mannose asparaginyl oligosaccharide reveal that monosaccharides or alpha1-6-linked mannose bind to MBP-A in one orientation, whereas alpha1-2- or alpha1-3-linked mannose binds in an orientation rotated 180 degrees around a local symmetry axis relating the 3- and 4-OH groups. In contrast, a similar set of ligands all bind to MBP-C in a single orientation. The mutation of MBP-A His(189) to its MBP-C equivalent, valine, causes Man alpha 1-3Man to bind in a mixture of orientations. These data combined with modeling indicate that the residue at this position influences the orientation of bound ligands in MBP. We propose that the control of binding orientation can influence the recognition of multivalent ligands. A lateral association of trimers in the cross-linked crystals may reflect interactions within higher oligomers of MBP-A that are stabilized by multivalent ligands.

Highlights

  • Mannose-binding proteins (MBPs) are C-type animal lectins that recognize high mannose oligosaccharides on pathogenic cell surfaces

  • The crystal structures of MBP-A soaked with monosaccharides and disaccharides and the structure of the MBP-A trimer cross-linked by a high mannose asparaginyl oligosaccharide reveal that monosaccharides or ␣1– 6-linked mannose bind to MBP-A in one orientation, whereas ␣1–2- or ␣1–3-linked mannose binds in an orientation rotated 180° around a local symmetry axis relating the 3- and 4-OH groups

  • The crystals of the homologous MBP-C carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) grow in the absence of sugar and were used to examine the structures of a series of cognate monosaccharides (14)

Read more

Summary

IMPLICATIONS FOR MULTIVALENT LIGAND RECOGNITION*

The trimeric structures of fragments of rat and human MBPs comprising the CRD plus ␣-helical neck regions reveal that the sugar binding sites on the trimer are spaced too far apart to bind to different branches of typical vertebrate high mannose oligosaccharides (9, 10). They are presumably able to bind multivalently to the dense, repetitive arrays of Man-type ligands present on bacterial and fungal cell surfaces. We report the structure of trimeric MBP-A cross-linked by an oligosaccharide and discuss the implications of this structure for multivalent cell surface recognition and complement activation

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Angle rmsd
DISCUSSION
High affinity linear trimannosee
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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