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Title: Comparative cross-linking activities of lactose-specific plant and animal lectins and a natural lactose-binding immunoglobulin G fraction from human serum with asialofetuin. Author: Gupta D, Kaltner H, Dong X, Gabius HJ, Brewer CF. Journal: Glycobiology; 1996 Dec; 6(8):843-9. PubMed ID: 9023547. Abstract: Plant and animal lectins bind and cross-link certain multiantennary oligosaccharides, glycopeptides, and glycoproteins. This can lead to the formation of homogeneous cross-linked complexes, which may differ in their stoichiometry depending on the nature of the sugar receptor involved. As a precisely defined ligand, we have employed bovine asialofetuin (ASF), a glycoprotein that possesses three asparagine-linked triantennary complex carbohydrate chains with terminal LacNAc residues. In the present study, we have compared the carbohydrate cross-linking properties of two Lac-specific plant lectins, an animal lectin and a naturally occurring Lac-binding polyclonal immunoglobulin G subfraction from human serum with the ligand. Quantitative precipitation studies of the Lac-specific plant lectins, Viscum album agglutinin and Ricinus communis agglutinin, and the Lac-specific 16 kDa dimeric galectin from chicken liver demonstrate that these lectins form specific, stoichiometric cross-linked complexes with ASF. At low concentrations of ASF, 1:9 ASF/lectin (monomer) complexes formed with both plant lectins and the chicken lectin. With increasing concentrations of ASF, 1:3 ASF/lectin (monomer) complexes formed with the lectins irrespective of their source or size. The naturally occurring polyclonal antibodies, however, revealed a different cross-linking behavior. They show the formation of 1:3 ASF/antibody (per Fab moiety) cross-linked complexes at all concentrations of ASF. These studies demonstrate that Lac-specific plant and animal lectins as well as the Lac-binding immunoglobulin subfraction from specific stoichiometric cross-linked complexes with ASF. These results are discussed in terms of the structure-function properties of multivalent lectins and antibodies.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]