1. Yeast expressed ArtinM shares structure, carbohydrate recognition, and biological effects with native ArtinM.
- Author
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Cecílio NT, Carvalho FC, Liu Y, Moncrieffe M, Buranello PA, Zorzetto-Fernandes AL, Luche DD, Hanna ES, Soares SG, Feizi T, Gay NJ, Goldman MH, and Roque-Barreira MC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Degranulation drug effects, Cell Degranulation immunology, Cell Movement drug effects, Cell Movement immunology, Cytokines biosynthesis, Hemagglutination, Humans, Macrophages drug effects, Macrophages immunology, Macrophages metabolism, Male, Mannose-Binding Lectins metabolism, Mannose-Binding Lectins pharmacology, Mast Cells drug effects, Mast Cells immunology, Mast Cells metabolism, Mice, Neutrophils drug effects, Neutrophils immunology, Neutrophils metabolism, Polysaccharides chemistry, Protein Binding, Toll-Like Receptor 2, Yeasts genetics, Yeasts metabolism, Carbohydrates chemistry, Mannose-Binding Lectins chemistry, Molecular Structure, Recombinant Proteins
- Abstract
Recent advances in glycobiology have revealed the essential role of lectins in deciphering the glycocodes at the cell surface to generate important biological signaling responses. ArtinM, a d-mannose-binding lectin isolated from the seeds of jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus), is composed of 16 kDa subunits that are associated to form a homotetramer. Native ArtinM (n-ArtinM) exerts immunomodulatory and regenerative effects, but the potential pharmaceutical applicability of the lectin is highly limited by the fact that its production is expensive, laborious, and impossible to be scaled up. This led us to characterize a recombinant form of the lectin obtained by expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (y-ArtinM). In the present study, we demonstrated that y-ArtinM is similar to n-ArtinM in subunit arrangement, oligomerization and carbohydrate binding specificity. We showed that y-ArtinM can exert n-ArtinM biological activities such as erythrocyte agglutination, stimulation of neutrophil migration and degranulation, mast cell degranulation, and induction of interleukin-12 and interleukin-10 production by macrophages. In summary, the expression of ArtinM in yeast resulted in successful production of an active, recombinant form of ArtinM that is potentially useful for pharmaceutical application., (Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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