Abstract

Galectins are a family of lectins that bind β-galactosides through their conserved carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) and can induce aggregation with glycoproteins or glycolipids on the cell surface and thereby regulate cell activation, migration, adhesion, and signaling. Galectin-3 has an intrinsically disordered N-terminal domain and a canonical CRD. Unlike the other 14 known galectins in mammalian cells, which have dimeric or tandem-repeated CRDs enabling multivalency for various functions, galectin-3 is monomeric, and its functional multivalency therefore is somewhat of a mystery. Here, we used NMR spectroscopy, mutagenesis, small-angle X-ray scattering, and computational modeling to study the self-association-related multivalency of galectin-3 at the residue-specific level. We show that the disordered N-terminal domain (residues ∼20-100) interacts with itself and with a part of the CRD not involved in carbohydrate recognition (β-strands 7-9; residues ∼200-220), forming a fuzzy complex via inter- and intramolecular interactions, mainly through hydrophobicity. These fuzzy interactions are characteristic of intrinsically disordered proteins to achieve liquid-liquid phase separation, and we demonstrated that galectin-3 can also undergo liquid-liquid phase separation. We propose that galectin-3 may achieve multivalency through this multisite self-association mechanism facilitated by fuzzy interactions.

Highlights

  • Galectins are a family of lectins that bind ␤-galactosides through their conserved carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) and can induce aggregation with glycoproteins or glycolipids on the cell surface and thereby regulate cell activation, migration, adhesion, and signaling

  • These fuzzy interactions are characteristic of intrinsically disordered proteins to achieve liquid–liquid phase separation, and we demonstrated that galectin-3 can undergo liquid–liquid phase separation

  • We propose that galectin-3 may achieve multivalency through this multisite self-association mechanism facilitated by fuzzy interactions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Galectins are a family of lectins that bind ␤-galactosides through their conserved carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) and can induce aggregation with glycoproteins or glycolipids on the cell surface and thereby regulate cell activation, migration, adhesion, and signaling. Mayo and co-workers [21] assigned the backbone chemical shifts of galectin-3 and demonstrated detailed studies of this protein [18, 22] They identified a transient ␣-helix in the NTD (residues 5–15) and showed that the PGAX motif is the epitope interacting with the CRD (by titrating synthetic peptides with the CRD alone). How the NTD mediates galectin-3 self-association is still unclear

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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