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Recognition of Complex Core-Fucosylated N-Glycans by a Mini Lectin.

Aurore CabanettesLukas PerkamsCarolina SpiesCarlo UnverzagtAnnabelle Varrot
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2018)
The mini fungal lectin PhoSL was recombinantly produced and characterized. Despite a length of only 40 amino acids, PhoSL exclusively recognizes N-glycans with α1,6-linked fucose. Core fucosylation influences the intrinsic properties and bioactivities of mammalian N-glycoproteins and its level is linked to various cancers. Thus, PhoSL serves as a promising tool for glycoprofiling. Without structural precedence, the crystal structure was solved using the zinc anomalous signal, and revealed an interlaced trimer creating a novel protein fold termed β-prism III. Three biantennary core-fucosylated N-glycan azides of 8 to 12 sugars were cocrystallized with PhoSL. The resulting highly resolved structures gave a detailed view on how the exclusive recognition of α1,6-fucosylated N-glycans by such a small protein occurs. This work also provided a protein consensus motif for the observed specificity as well as a glimpse into N-glycan flexibility upon binding.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • cell surface
  • crystal structure
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • high resolution
  • small molecule
  • single cell