4.6 Article

Quantitative Characterization of E-selectin Interaction with Native CD44 and P-selectin Glycoprotein Ligand-1 (PSGL-1) Using a Real Time Immunoprecipitation-based Binding Assay

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 290, Issue 35, Pages 21213-21230

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.629451

Keywords

CD44; cell adhesion; cell migration; glycobiology; glycoprotein; surface plasmon resonance (SPR); PSGL-1; selectin; selectin ligand; sialyl Lewis x

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Background: E-selectin interactions with glycoprotein ligands mediate the initial capturing of cells out of flow. Results: Adopting a Biacore-based immunoprecipitation binding assay unraveled differential binding kinetics of monomeric (m) versus dimeric (d) E-selectin to endogenous ligands. Conclusion: Although mE-selectin binds transiently, dE-selectin binds with remarkably slow on- and off-rates. Significance: Transitioning from monomeric to dimeric E-selectin could enable fast but firm capturing of cells out of flow. Selectins (E-, P-, and L-selectins) interact with glycoprotein ligands to mediate the essential tethering/rolling step in cell transport and delivery that captures migrating cells from the circulating flow. In this work, we developed a real time immunoprecipitation assay on a surface plasmon resonance chip that captures native glycoforms of two well known E-selectin ligands (CD44/hematopoietic cell E-/L-selectin ligand and P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1) from hematopoietic cell extracts. Here we present a comprehensive characterization of their binding to E-selectin. We show that both ligands bind recombinant monomeric E-selectin transiently with fast on- and fast off-rates, whereas they bind dimeric E-selectin with remarkably slow on- and off-rates. This binding requires the sialyl Lewis x sugar moiety to be placed on both O- and N-glycans, and its association, but not dissociation, is sensitive to the salt concentration. Our results suggest a mechanism through which monomeric selectins mediate initial fast on and fast off kinetics to help capture cells out of the circulating shear flow; subsequently, tight binding by dimeric/oligomeric selectins is enabled to significantly slow rolling.

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