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Isolation, characterization and molecular evolution of a novel pearl shell lectin from a marine bivalve, Pteria penguin
Authors:Takako Naganuma  Tomohisa Ogawa  Jun Hirabayashi  Kenichi Kasai  Hisao Kamiya  Koji Muramoto
Institution:(1) Department of Biomolecular Sciences, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai 981-8555, Japan;(2) Center for Interdisciplinary Research, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8578, Japan;(3) Research Center for Glycoscience, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba 305-8568, Ibaraki, Japan;(4) Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Teikyo University, Sagamiko 199-0195, Kanagawa, Japan;(5) School of Fisheries Sciences, Kitasato University, Iwate 022-0101, Japan
Abstract:A novel lectin, PPL, was isolated from the mantle of penguin wing oyster (Pteria penguin) by affinity chromatography on mucin-Sepharose 4B and cation exchange chromatography on HiTrap SP. This lectin was estimated to be a 21-kDa monomer by gel filtration, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and matrix-assisted time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry. However, dynamic light scattering experiments revealed that a non-covalently linked dimer formed under high salt conditions (500 mM NaCl). Interestingly, PPL showed an increasing hemagglutinating activity with increasing salt concentration. The amino acid sequence of PPL was determined by direct protein sequence analysis and cDNA cloning. The 167-amino acid sequence included 24 lysine residues and had two tandemly repeated homologous domains (residues 20-78 and 107-165) with 44% internal homology. PPL showed sequence homology to L-rhamnose-binding lectins from fish eggs and a D-galactose-binding lectin from sea urchin eggs, with sequence identities in the range 37-48%. PPL agglutinated various animal erythrocytes independently of calcium ions. The minimum concentration of PPL needed to agglutinate rabbit erythrocytes was 0.5 micro g/ml, and the most effective saccharides to inhibit the hemagglutination were D-galactose, methyl-D-galactopyranoside and N-acetyl-D-lactosamine. Lactose also inhibited hemagglutination, but L-rhamnose did so only weakly despite the sequence homology with trout egg L-rhamnose-binding lectins. The carbohydrate-binding specificity of PPL was further examined by frontal affinity chromatography using 37 different pyridylaminated oligosaccharides. PPL was found to have strong binding affinity for various oligosaccharides that have Galbeta1-4Glu/GlcNAc, Galbeta1-3GalNAc/GlcNAc and Galalpha 1-4Gal moieties in their structure. PPL had a high thermal stability and retained 50% of its hemagglutinating activity after incubation at 70 degrees C for 100 min. It agglutinated some Gram-negative bacteria by recognizing lipopolysaccharides. Together, these results suggest that PPL is a new member of the trout egg lectin family which participates in the self-defense mechanism against bacteria and pathogens with a distinct carbohydrate-binding specificity. We conclude that the trout egg lectin family proteins, in particular their carbohydrate recognition domains, have acquired diverse carbohydrate-binding specificities during molecular evolution.
Keywords:bivalves  lectin                  Pteria penguin                self-defence system  thermal stability
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