Ligand specificity of human surfactant protein D: Expression of a mutant trimeric collectin that shows enhanced interactions with influenza A virus

  • Erika Crouch
  • , Yizheng Tu
  • , David Briner
  • , Barbara McDonald
  • , Kelly Smith
  • , Uffe Holmskov
  • , Kevan Hartshorn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

50 Scopus citations

Abstract

Surfactant protein D is a pattern recognition molecule that plays diverse roles in immune regulation and anti-microbial host defense. Its interactions with known ligands are calcium-dependent and involve binding to the trimeric, C-type carbohydrate recognition domain. Surfactant protein D preferentially binds to glucose and related sugars. However, CL-43, a bovine serum lectin, which evolved through duplication of the surfactant protein D gene in ruminants, prefers mannose and mannose-rich polysaccharides. Surfactant protein D is characterized by two relatively conserved motifs at the binding face, along the edges of the shallow carbohydrate-binding groove. For CL-43, sequence alignments demonstrate a basic insertion, Arg-Ala-Lys (RAK), immediately N-terminal to the first motif. We hypothesized that this insertion contributes to the differences in saccharide selectivity and host defense function and compared the activities of recombinant trimeric neck + carbohydrate recognition domains of human surfactant protein D (NCRD) with CL-43 (RCL-43-NCRD) and selected NCRD mutants. Insertion of the CL-43 RAK sequence or a control Ala-Ala-Ala sequence (AAA) into the corresponding position in NCRD increased the efficiency of binding to mannan and changed the inhibitory potencies of competing saccharides to more closely resemble those of CL-43. In addition, RAK resembled CL-43 in its greater capacity to inhibit the infectivity of influenza A virus and to increase uptake of influenza by neutrophils.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)17046-17056
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume280
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 29 2005

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