1ci5
GLYCAN-FREE MUTANT ADHESION DOMAIN OF HUMAN CD58 (LFA-3)GLYCAN-FREE MUTANT ADHESION DOMAIN OF HUMAN CD58 (LFA-3)
Structural highlights
FunctionLFA3_HUMAN Ligand of the T-lymphocyte CD2 glycoprotein. This interaction is important in mediating thymocyte interactions with thymic epithelial cells, antigen-independent and -dependent interactions of T-lymphocytes with target cells and antigen-presenting cells and the T-lymphocyte rosetting with erythrocytes. In addition, the LFA-3/CD2 interaction may prime response by both the CD2+ and LFA-3+ cells. Evolutionary Conservation![]() Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedA general strategy is presented here for producing glycan-free forms of glycoproteins without loss of function by employing apolar-to-polar mutations of surface residues in functionally irrelevant epitopes. The success of this structure-based approach was demonstrated through the expression in Escherichia coli of a soluble 11 kDa adhesion domain extracted from the heavily glycosylated 55 kDa human CD58 ectodomain. The solution structure was subsequently determined and binding to its counter-receptor CD2 studied by NMR. This mutant adhesion domain is functional as determined by several experimental methods, and the size of its binding site has been probed by chemical shift perturbations in NMR titration experiments. The new structural information supports a 'hand-shake' model of CD2-CD58 interaction involving the GFCC'C" faces of both CD2 and CD58 adhesion domains. The region responsible for binding specificity is most likely localized on the C, C' and C" strands and the C-C' and C'-C" loops on CD58. Functional glycan-free adhesion domain of human cell surface receptor CD58: design, production and NMR studies.,Sun ZY, Dotsch V, Kim M, Li J, Reinherz EL, Wagner G EMBO J. 1999 Jun 1;18(11):2941-9. PMID:10357807[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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