1. Isolation and characterization of a lectin with antifungal activity from Egyptian Pisum sativum seeds
- Author
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Haitham A. Badr, Mahmoud Sitohy, and Mahmoud Doheim
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Trichoderma viride ,food and beverages ,Mannose ,Lectin ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Analytical Chemistry ,Pisum ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Agglutination (biology) ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Sephadex ,biology.protein ,Food Science ,Mannan-binding lectin - Abstract
A plant lectin isolated in its pure state from the Egyptian seeds of Pisum sativum (PSL) produced two bands in SDS–PAGE (5.53 and 19.3 kDa; i.e. α and β chain) but one peak by gel filtration chromatography on Sephadex G-100, corresponding to 50 kDa, i.e., a dimeric structure of two monomers, each consisting of one α and one β subunit. PSL is a glycoprotein bound with glucose (2 mol/mol of protein) and stabilized by 2 atoms of each of Ca 2+ and Mn 2+ per molecule of protein. It highly agglutinated human, rabbit and rat erythrocytes but weakly agglutinated chicken erythrocytes, while no agglutination occurred with sheep erythrocytes. Hemagglutination was markedly affected by acidic pH, but was heat stable below 60 °C for 30 min. Among the various tested sugars, PSL agglutination was most inhibited by mannose. PSL is rich in hydroxyl amino acids while totally lacking sulfur amino acids. PSL inhibited the growth of Aspergillus flavus, Trichoderma viride and Fusarium oxysporum .
- Published
- 2007