C-terminal post-translational proteolysis of plant lectins and their recombinant forms expressed in Escherichia coli. Characterization of "ragged ends" by mass spectrometry.

  • E. Rodriguez-Arango
  • N. Sharon
  • N. M. Young
  • M. Yaguchi
  • R. Adar
  • Rafael Arango
  • P. K. S. Blay
  • Pierre Thibault
  • D. C. Watson
Publication date
February 1995

Abstract

Electrospray mass spectrometry was used to accurately measure the molecular masses of single chain lectins from legume seeds and also of three recombinant lectins, expressed in Escherichia coli. The five single chain lectins, Erythrina corallodendron lectin, soybean and peanut agglutinins, Dolichos biflorus lectin, and Phaseolus vulgaris hemagglutinin E, all showed evidence of C-terminal proteolytic processing, in some cases to "ragged" ends, when their masses were compared to those expected from their cDNA sequences and their known carbohydrate chains. Recombinant forms of the lectins from E. corallodendron, soybean, and peanut also showed C-terminal trimming, but not to the same points as the natural forms. Discrepancies between the prote...

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