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Multimer Formation and Ligand Recognition by the Long Pentraxin PTX3

Authors :
Alberto Mantovani
Luca De Gioia
Barbara Bottazzi
Valérie Vouret-Craviari
Giuseppe Peri
Martino Introna
Elisabetta Gianazza
Mario Salmona
Francesco Tedesco
Cinzia D'Ettorre
Antonio Bastone
Cristian Matteucci
Aldo Tagliabue
Fabio Spreafico
M. Pausa
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 272:32817-32823
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1997.

Abstract

PTX3 is a prototypic long pentraxin consisting of a C-terminal 203-amino acid pentraxin-like domain coupled with an N-terminal 178-amino acid unrelated portion. The present study was designed to characterize the structure and ligand binding properties of human PTX3, in comparison with the classical pentraxins C-reactive protein and serum amyloid P component. Sequencing of Chinese hamster ovary cell-expressed PTX3 revealed that the mature secreted protein starts at residue 18 (Glu). Lectin binding and treatment withN-glycosidase F showed that PTX3 isN-glycosylated, sugars accounting for 5 kDa of the monomer mass (45 kDa). Circular dichroism analysis indicated that the protein consists predominantly of β-sheets with a minor α-helical component. While in gel filtration the protein is eluted with a molecular mass of ≅900 kDa, gel electrophoresis using nondenaturing, nonreducing conditions revealed that PTX3 forms multimers predominantly of 440 kDa apparent molecular mass, corresponding to decamers, and that disulfide bonds are required for multimer formation. The ligand binding properties of PTX3 were then examined. As predicted based on modeling, inductive coupled plasma/atomic emission spectroscopy showed that PTX3 does not have coordinated Ca2+. Unlike the classical pentraxins CRP and SAP, PTX3 did not bind phosphoethanolamine, phosphocholine, or high pyruvate agarose. PTX3 in solution, bound to immobilized C1q, but not C1s, and, reciprocally, C1q bound to immobilized PTX3. Binding of PTX3 to C1q is specific and saturable with a K d 7.4 × 10−8 m as determined by solid phase binding assay. The Chinese hamster ovary cell-expressed pentraxin domain bound C1q when multimerized. Thus, as predicted on the basis of computer modeling, the prototypic long pentraxin PTX3 forms multimers, which differ from those formed by classical pentraxins in terms of protomer composition and requirement for disulfide bonds, and does not recognize CRP/SAP ligands. The capacity to bind C1q, mediated by the pentraxin domain, is consistent with the view that PTX3, produced in tissues by endothelial cells or macrophages in response to interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor, may act as a local regulator of innate immunity.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
272
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........268e7cb49973971dcf3e5e4b65a1d67e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.52.32817