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Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode

Langerin is a C-type lectin specifically expressed in Langerhans cells. As recently shown for HIV, Langerin is thought to capture pathogens and mediate their internalisation into Birbeck Granules for elimination. However, the precise functions of Langerin remain elusive, mostly because of the lack o...

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Autores principales: Chabrol, Eric, Nurisso, Alessandra, Daina, Antoine, Vassal-Stermann, Emilie, Thepaut, Michel, Girard, Eric, Vivès, Romain R., Fieschi, Franck
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3511376/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23226363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050722
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author Chabrol, Eric
Nurisso, Alessandra
Daina, Antoine
Vassal-Stermann, Emilie
Thepaut, Michel
Girard, Eric
Vivès, Romain R.
Fieschi, Franck
author_facet Chabrol, Eric
Nurisso, Alessandra
Daina, Antoine
Vassal-Stermann, Emilie
Thepaut, Michel
Girard, Eric
Vivès, Romain R.
Fieschi, Franck
author_sort Chabrol, Eric
collection PubMed
description Langerin is a C-type lectin specifically expressed in Langerhans cells. As recently shown for HIV, Langerin is thought to capture pathogens and mediate their internalisation into Birbeck Granules for elimination. However, the precise functions of Langerin remain elusive, mostly because of the lack of information on its binding properties and physiological ligands. Based on recent reports that Langerin binds to sulfated sugars, we conducted here a comparative analysis of Langerin interaction with mannose-rich HIV glycoprotein gp120 and glycosaminoglycan (GAGs), a family of sulfated polysaccharides expressed at the surface of most mammalian cells. Our results first revealed that Langerin bound to these different glycans through very distinct mechanisms and led to the identification of a novel, GAG-specific binding mode within Langerin. In contrast to the canonical lectin domain, this new binding site showed no Ca(2+)-dependency, and could only be detected in entire, trimeric extracellular domains of Langerin. Interestingly binding to GAGs, did not simply rely on a net charge effect, but rather on more discrete saccharide features, such as 6-O-sulfation, or iduronic acid content. Using molecular modelling simulations, we proposed a model of Langerin/heparin complex, which located the GAG binding site at the interface of two of the three Carbohydrate-recognition domains of the protein, at the edge of the a-helix coiled-coil. To our knowledge, the binding properties that we have highlighted here for Langerin, have never been reported for C-type lectins before. These findings provide new insights towards the understanding of Langerin biological functions.
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spelling pubmed-35113762012-12-05 Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode Chabrol, Eric Nurisso, Alessandra Daina, Antoine Vassal-Stermann, Emilie Thepaut, Michel Girard, Eric Vivès, Romain R. Fieschi, Franck PLoS One Research Article Langerin is a C-type lectin specifically expressed in Langerhans cells. As recently shown for HIV, Langerin is thought to capture pathogens and mediate their internalisation into Birbeck Granules for elimination. However, the precise functions of Langerin remain elusive, mostly because of the lack of information on its binding properties and physiological ligands. Based on recent reports that Langerin binds to sulfated sugars, we conducted here a comparative analysis of Langerin interaction with mannose-rich HIV glycoprotein gp120 and glycosaminoglycan (GAGs), a family of sulfated polysaccharides expressed at the surface of most mammalian cells. Our results first revealed that Langerin bound to these different glycans through very distinct mechanisms and led to the identification of a novel, GAG-specific binding mode within Langerin. In contrast to the canonical lectin domain, this new binding site showed no Ca(2+)-dependency, and could only be detected in entire, trimeric extracellular domains of Langerin. Interestingly binding to GAGs, did not simply rely on a net charge effect, but rather on more discrete saccharide features, such as 6-O-sulfation, or iduronic acid content. Using molecular modelling simulations, we proposed a model of Langerin/heparin complex, which located the GAG binding site at the interface of two of the three Carbohydrate-recognition domains of the protein, at the edge of the a-helix coiled-coil. To our knowledge, the binding properties that we have highlighted here for Langerin, have never been reported for C-type lectins before. These findings provide new insights towards the understanding of Langerin biological functions. Public Library of Science 2012-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3511376/ /pubmed/23226363 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050722 Text en © 2012 Chabrol et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chabrol, Eric
Nurisso, Alessandra
Daina, Antoine
Vassal-Stermann, Emilie
Thepaut, Michel
Girard, Eric
Vivès, Romain R.
Fieschi, Franck
Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode
title Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode
title_full Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode
title_fullStr Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode
title_full_unstemmed Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode
title_short Glycosaminoglycans Are Interactants of Langerin: Comparison with gp120 Highlights an Unexpected Calcium-Independent Binding Mode
title_sort glycosaminoglycans are interactants of langerin: comparison with gp120 highlights an unexpected calcium-independent binding mode
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3511376/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23226363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050722
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