The role of
individual carbohydrate-binding sites in the function of the potent anti-HIV
lectin Griffithsin
Jie Xue, Yongguang Gao, Bart Hoorelbeke, Ioannis
Kagiampakis, Bo Zhao, Borries Demeler,
Jan Balzarini, and Patricia J. LiWang
Molecular
Pharmaceutics 4, 2613-2625 (2012)
Griffithsin
(GRFT) is a lectin that has been shown to inhibit HIV infection by binding to
high mannose glycan structures on the surface of gp120, and is among the most
potent HIV entry inhibitors reported so far. However, important biochemical
details on the antiviral mechanism of GRFT action remain unexplored. In order
to understand the role of the three individual carbohydrate-binding sites (CBS)
in GRFT, mutations were made at each site (D30A, D70A, and D112A), and the
resulting mutants were investigated.
NMR studies revealed that each GRFT variant was folded but showed
significant peak movement on the carbohydrate-binding face of the protein. The wild-type
and each point mutant protein appeared as tight dimers with a Kd below 4.2
µM. Mutation of any individual CBS
on GRFT reduced binding of the protein to mannose, and ELISA assays revealed a
partial loss of ability of each GRFT point mutant to bind gp120, with a
near-complete loss of binding by the triple mutant D30A/D70A/D112A GRFT. A more quantitative surface plasmon
resonance (SPR) examination showed a rather small
loss of binding to gp120 for the individual GRFT point mutants (KD:
123 to 245 pM range versus 73 pM for wild-type GRFT), but dramatic loss of the
triple mutant to bind gp120 derived from R5 and X4 strains (KD > 12
nM). In contrast to the 2- to 3-fold loss of binding to gp120, the single CBS
point mutants of GRFT were significantly less able to inhibit viral infection,
exhibiting a 26- to 1900-fold loss of potency, while the triple mutant was at
least 875 fold less effective against HIV-1 infection. The disparity between HIV-1 gp120
binding ability and HIV inhibitory potency for these GRFT variants indicates
that gp120 binding and virus neutralization do not necessarily correlate, and
suggests a mechanism that is not based on simple gp120 binding.