Conformation, protein-carbohydrate interactions and a novel subunit association in the refined structure of peanut lectin-lactose complex

Banerjee, R. ; Das, K. ; Ravishankar, R. ; Suguna, K. ; Surolia, A. ; Vijayan, M. (1996) Conformation, protein-carbohydrate interactions and a novel subunit association in the refined structure of peanut lectin-lactose complex Journal of Molecular Biology, 259 (2). pp. 281-296. ISSN 0022-2836

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Official URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.1996.0319

Abstract

The structure of the complex of the tetrameric peanut lectin with lactose has been refined to anR-value of 16.4% using 2.25 Å resolution X-ray diffraction data. The subunit conformation in the structure is similar to that in other legume lectins except in the loops. It has been shown that in the tertiary structure of legume lectins, the short five-stranded sheet plays a major role in connecting the larger flat six-stranded and curved seven-stranded sheets. Furthermore, the loops that connect the strands at the two ends of the seven-stranded sheet curve toward and interact with each other to produce a second hydrophobic core in addition to the one between the two large sheets. The protein-lactose interactions involve the invariant features observed in other legume lectins in addition to those characteristic of peanut lectin. The "open" quaternary association in peanut lectin is stabilised by hydrophobic, hydrogen-bonded and water-mediated interactions. Contrary to the earlier belief, the structure of peanut lectin demonstrates that the variability in quaternary association in legume lectins, despite all of them having nearly the same tertiary structure, is not necessarily caused by covalently bound carbohydrate. An attempt has been made to provide a structural rationale for this variability, on the basis of buried surface areas during dimerisation. A total of 45 water molecules remain invariant when the hydration shells of the four subunits are compared. A majority of them appear to be involved in stabilising loops.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Science.
Keywords:Legume Lectin; Open Quaternary Structure; Carbohydrate Specificity; Protein Crystallography; Protein Hydration
ID Code:55202
Deposited On:18 Aug 2011 11:59
Last Modified:15 Jul 2012 17:51

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