Imparting Exquisite Specificity to Peanut Agglutinin for the Tumor-associated Thomsen-Friedenreich Antigen by Redesign of Its Combining Site

  • Sharma, Vivek
  • Vijayan, M
  • Surolia, Avadhesha
Publication date
August 1996
Publisher
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Abstract

Lectins from legumes constitute one of the most thoroughly studied families of proteins, yet the absence of a rigorous framework to explain their carbohydrate binding specificities appears to have prevented a rational approach to alter their ligand binding activity. Studies reported here deal with the redesign of the recognition propensity of peanut agglutinin (PNA), an important member of the family. PNA is extensively used as a tool for recognition of the tumor-associated Thomsen-Friedenrich antigen (T-antigen; Galb1–3GalNAc) on the surfaces of malignant cells and immature thymocytes. PNA also recognizes N-acetyllactosamine (LacNAc;Galb1–4GlcNAc), which is present at the termini of several cell-surface glycoproteins. The crystal structure...

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