1. Academic Validation
  2. Structural insights into the innate immune recognition specificities of L- and H-ficolins

Structural insights into the innate immune recognition specificities of L- and H-ficolins

  • EMBO J. 2007 Jan 24;26(2):623-33. doi: 10.1038/sj.emboj.7601500.
Virginie Garlatti 1 Nicolas Belloy Lydie Martin Monique Lacroix Misao Matsushita Yuichi Endo Teizo Fujita Juan Carlos Fontecilla-Camps Gérard J Arlaud Nicole M Thielens Christine Gaboriaud
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Laboratoire de Cristallographie et Cristallogénèse des Protéines, Grenoble, France.
Abstract

Innate immunity relies critically upon the ability of a few pattern recognition molecules to sense molecular markers on pathogens, but little is known about these interactions at the atomic level. Human L- and H-ficolins are soluble oligomeric defence proteins with lectin-like activity, assembled from collagen fibers prolonged by fibrinogen-like recognition domains. The X-ray structures of their trimeric recognition domains, alone and in complex with various ligands, have been solved to resolutions up to 1.95 and 1.7 A, respectively. Both domains have three-lobed structures with clefts separating the distal parts of the protomers. Ca(2+) ions are found at sites homologous to those described for tachylectin 5A (TL5A), an invertebrate lectin. Outer binding sites (S1) homologous to the GlcNAc-binding pocket of TL5A are present in the ficolins but show different structures and specificities. In L-ficolin, three additional binding sites (S2-S4) surround the cleft. Together, they define an unpredicted continuous recognition surface able to sense various acetylated and neutral carbohydrate markers in the context of extended Polysaccharides such as 1,3-beta-D-glucan, as found on microbial or apoptotic surfaces.

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