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Journal Article

Determination of carbohydrate-binding preferences of human galectins with carbohydrate microarrays.

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Mishra,  Rashmi
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Max Planck Society;

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Simons,  Kai
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Max Planck Society;

Hirashima,  Mitsuomi
Max Planck Society;

Niki,  Toshiro
Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Horlacher, T., Oberli, M. A., Werz, D. B., Kröck, L., Bufali, S., Mishra, R., et al. (2010). Determination of carbohydrate-binding preferences of human galectins with carbohydrate microarrays. ChemBioChem: A European Journal of Chemical Biology, 11(11), 1563-1573.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0001-0B51-8
Abstract
Galectins are a class of carbohydrate-binding proteins named for their galactose-binding preference and are involved in a host of processes ranging from homeostasis of organisms to immune responses. As a first step towards correlating the carbohydrate-binding preferences of the different galectins with their biological functions, we determined carbohydrate recognition fine-specificities of galectins with the aid of carbohydrate microarrays. A focused set of oligosaccharides considered relevant to galectins was prepared by chemical synthesis. Structure-activity relationships for galectin-sugar interactions were determined, and these helped in the establishment of redundant and specific galectin actions by comparison of binding preferences. Distinct glycosylations on the basic lactosyl motifs proved to be key to galectin binding regulation--and therefore galectin action--as either high-affinity ligands are produced or binding is blocked. High-affinity ligands such as the blood group antigens that presumably mediate particular functions were identified.