Protein Domain : IPR030650

Type:  Family Name:  Galectin-16
Description:  Animal lectins are proteins that bind to sugars and are involved in most non-structural roles of sugars, including trafficking of glycoconjugates and cell-cell recognition. Although they may be structurally very complex, they typically bind through the activity of a specific compact protein domain known as a carbohydrate-binding domain or CRD []. Animal lectins display a wide variety of architectures, and are classified according to the carbohydrate-recognition domain (CRD) of which there are two main types, S-type and C-type.Galectins (previously S-lectins) bind exclusively beta-galactosides like lactose. They do not require metal ions for activity. Galectins are found predominantly, but not exclusively in mammals []. Their function is unclear. They are developmentally regulated and may be involved in differentiation, cellular regulation and tissue construction. Mammalian galectins typically bind beta-galactosides. Their CRD shows a structural similarity to L-type lectin CRDs, but no strong sequence similarity, suggesting convergent evolution []. They are classified into three subgroups: proto type, which contain one CRD (Gal-1, -2, -5, -7, -10, -11, -13, -14 and -15); tandem repeat type, which contain two CRDs in tandem (Gal-4, -6, -8, -9 and -12); and chimera type, which contain one CRD and an additional non-lectin domain (Gal-3) [, ].Galectin-16 is found in primates. It is a placenta-specific galectin that induces the apoptosis of T lymphocytes, which may reduce the danger of maternal immune attacks on the fetal semiallograft during the long gestation of anthropoid primates []. Galectin-16 binds lactose with high affinity. Short Name:  Galectin_16

0 Child Features

0 Contains

1 Cross References

Identifier
PTHR11346:SF77

0 Found In

2 GO Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0030395 IPR030650
GO:0070234 IPR030650

2 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0030395 IPR030650
GO:0070234 IPR030650

0 Parent Features

0 Proteins

6 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            8262940
            14758066
            8124704
            9787635
            8400545
            19497882