Artículos de revistas
Impact of human galectin-1 binding to saccharide ligands on dimer dissociation kinetics and structure
Fecha
2016-12-05Registro en:
Romero, Juan Manuel; Trujillo, Madia; Estrin, Dario Ariel; Rabinovich, Gabriel Adrián; Di Lella, Santiago; Impact of human galectin-1 binding to saccharide ligands on dimer dissociation kinetics and structure; Oxford University Press; Glycobiology; 26; 12; 5-12-2016; 1317-1327
0959-6658
1460-2423
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Romero, Juan Manuel
Trujillo, Madia
Estrin, Dario Ariel
Rabinovich, Gabriel Adrián
Di Lella, Santiago
Resumen
Endogenous lectins can control critical biological responses, including cell communication, signaling, angiogenesis and immunity by decoding glycan-containing information on a variety of cellular receptors and the extracellular matrix. Galectin-1 (Gal-1), a prototype member of the galectin family, displays only one carbohydrate recognition domain and occurs in a subtle homodimerization equilibrium at physiologic concentrations. Such equilibrium critically governs the function of this lectin signaling by allowing tunable interactions with a preferential set of glycosylated receptors. Here, we used a combination of experimental and computational approaches to analyze the kinetics and mechanisms connecting Gal-1 ligand unbinding and dimer dissociation processes. Kinetic constants of both processes were found to differ by an order of magnitude. By means of steered molecular dynamics simulations, the ligand unbinding process was followed monitoring water occupancy changes. By determining the water sites in a carbohydrate binding place during the unbinding process, we found that rupture of ligand-protein interactions induces an increase in energy barrier while ligand unbinding process takes place, whereas the entry of water molecules to the binding groove and further occupation of their corresponding water sites contributes to lowering of the energy barrier. Moreover, our findings suggested local asymmetries between the two subunits in the dimer structure detected at a nanosecond timescale. Thus, integration of experimental and computational data allowed a more complete understanding of lectin ligand binding and dimerization processes, suggesting new insights into the relationship between Gal-1 structure and function and renewing the discussion on the biophysics and biochemistry of lectin-ligand lattices.