AI Article Synopsis

  • A human lectin array has been developed to study how immune receptors interact with various microbes, featuring C-type carbohydrate-recognition domains (CRDs) and other sugar-binding receptors like galectins and siglecs.
  • The array is designed using biotin-tagged CRDs, allowing for easy detection of binding interactions on a streptavidin-coated surface, facilitating comparisons across different types of glycan-binding receptors.
  • Initial tests show unexpected binding patterns, revealing that some galectins interact strongly with bacterial glycans, highlighting the array's potential to provide new insights into innate immune interactions with diverse microorganisms.

Article Abstract

A human lectin array has been developed to probe the interactions of innate immune receptors with pathogenic and commensal microorganisms. Following the successful introduction of a lectin array containing all of the cow C-type carbohydrate-recognition domains (CRDs), a human array described here contains the C-type CRDs as well as CRDs from other classes of sugar-binding receptors, including galectins, siglecs, R-type CRDs, ficolins, intelectins, and chitinase-like lectins. The array is constructed with CRDs modified with single-site biotin tags, ensuring that the sugar-binding sites in CRDs are displayed on a streptavidin-coated surface in a defined orientation and are accessible to the surfaces of microbes. A common approach used for expression and display of CRDs from all of the different structural categories of glycan-binding receptors allows comparisons across lectin families. In addition to previously documented protocols for binding of fluorescently labeled bacteria, methods have been developed for detecting unlabeled bacteria bound to the array by counter-staining with DNA-binding dye. Screening has also been undertaken with viral glycoproteins and bacterial and fungal polysaccharides. The array provides an unbiased screen for sugar ligands that interact with receptors and many show binding not anticipated from earlier studies. For example, some of the galectins bind with high affinity to bacterial glycans that lack lactose or N-acetyllactosamine. The results demonstrate the utility of the human lectin array for providing a unique overview of the interactions of multiple classes of glycan-binding proteins in the innate immune system with different types of microorganisms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11566865PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2024.107869DOI Listing

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