Abstract

Lectins from plants of the Diocleinae subtribe often exhibit specificity towards mannose/glucose and derived sugars, with some plants also displaying a second lectin specific to lactose/GalNAc. Here, we present a novel lectin from Collaea speciosa, named CsL, that displays specificity for GlcNAc/glucose. The lectin was extracted from Collaea speciosa seeds and purified by a single chromatographic step on a Sephadex G-50 matrix. In solution, the lectin appears as a dimeric protein composed of 25 kDa monomers. The protein is stable at pH 7–8 and dependent on divalent cations. CsL maintained its agglutination activity after heating to 90 °C for 1 h. Glycan array studies revealed that CsL binds to N-glycans with terminal GlcNAc residues, chitobiose and chitotriose moieties. The partial amino acid sequence of the lectin is similar to that of some lactose-specific lectins from the same subtribe. In contrast to other ConA-like lectins, CsL is not toxic to Artemia. Because of its remarkably different properties and specificity, this lectin could be the first member of a new group inside the Diocleinae lectins.

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