Porphyrin binding to jacalin is facilitated by the inherent plasticity of the carbohydrate-binding site: Novel mode of lectin-ligand interaction
Porphyrin binding to jacalin is facilitated by the inherent plasticity of the carbohydrate-binding site: Novel mode of lectin-ligand interaction
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Date
2004-02-01
Authors
Goel, M.
Anuradha, P.
Kaur, K. J.
Maiya, B. G.
Swamy, M. J.
Salunke, D. M.
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Abstract
The crystal structure of the complex of meso-tetrasulfonatophenylporphyrin (H2TPPS) with jack fruit (Artocarpus integriflora) agglutinin (jacalin) has been determined at 1.8 Å resolution. A porphyrin pair is sandwiched between two symmetry-related jacalin monomers in the crystal, leading to a cross-linking network of protein molecules. Apart from the stacking interactions, H2TPPS also forms hydrogen bonds, some involving water bridges, with jacalin at the carbohydrate-binding site. The residues that are involved in rendering galactopyranoside specificity to jacalin undergo conformational adjustments in order to accommodate the H2TPPS molecule. The water molecules at the carbohydrate-binding site of jacalin cement the jacalin-porphyrin interactions, optimizing their complementarity. Interactions of porphyrin with jacalin are relatively weak compared with those observed between galactopyranoside and jacalin, perhaps because the former largely involves water-mediated hydrogen bonds. While H2TPPS binds to jacalin at the carbohydrate-binding site as in the case of ConA, its mode of interaction with jacalin is very different. H2TPPS does not enter the carbohydrate-binding cavity of jacalin. Instead, it sits over the binding site. While the porphyrin binding is mediated by replicating the hydrogen-bonding network of mannopyranoside through the sulfonate atoms in the case of ConA, the plasticity associated with the carbohydrate-binding site accommodates the pluripotent porphyrin molecule in the case of jacalin through an entirely different set of interactions. © 2004 International Union of Crystallography.
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Acta Crystallographica Section D: Biological Crystallography. v.60(2)