Characterization of the Laminin Binding Domains of the Lutheran Blood Group Glycoprotein

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Abstract

Lutheran (Lu) blood group antigens and the basal cell adhesion molecule antigen reside on two glycoproteins that belong to the Ig superfamily (IgSF) and carry five Ig-like extracellular domains. These glycoproteins act as widely expressed adhesion molecules and represent the unique receptors for laminin-10/11 in erythroid cells. Here, we report the mapping of IgSF domains responsible for binding to laminin. In plasmonic resonance surface experiments, only recombinant Lu proteins containing the N-terminal IgSF domains 1-3 were able to bind laminin-10/11 and to inhibit binding of laminin to Lu-expressing K562 cells. Mutant recombinant proteins containing only IgSF domain 1, domains 1 + 2, domains 1 + 3, domains 2 + 3, domain 3, domain 4, domain 5, and domains 4 + 5 failed to bind laminin as well as a construct containing all of the extracellular domains except domain 3. Altogether, these results indicate that IgSF domains 1-3 are involved in laminin binding and that a specific spatial arrangement of these three first domains is most probably necessary for interaction. Neither the RGD nor the N-glycosylation motifs present in IgSF domain 3 were involved in laminin binding.

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El Nemer, W., Gane, P., Colin, Y., D’Ambrosio, A. M., Callebaut, I., Cartron, J. P., & Le Van Kim, C. (2001). Characterization of the Laminin Binding Domains of the Lutheran Blood Group Glycoprotein. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(26), 23757–23762. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M102978200

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