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Concanavalin A (ConA)

Con-A

Concanavalin A is a lectin protein originally extracted from the jack-bean Canavalia ensiformis. It binds specifically to certain structures found in various sugars, glycoproteins, and glycolipids, mainly internal and nonreducing terminal alpha-mannosyl groups. It was the first lectin to be available on a commercial basis and is widely used in biology and biochemistry to characterize glycoproteins and other sugar-containing entities. It is also used to purify macromolecules in lectin affinity chromatography. Concanavalin A is also a lymphocyte mitogen. It is also widely believed to be involved in the interaction between alpha-mannosyl oligosaccharides on the surface of the HIV virus and the human T cell lymphocyte, used by the HIV virus to enter the T cell.It has also been shown as a stimulator of several matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs).

Reference

"Primary structures of concanavalin A-like lectins from seeds of two species of Canavalia."
Phytochemistry 33:985-987(1993) [PubMed] [Europe PMC] [Abstract]

"On the routine use of soft X-rays in macromolecular crystallography. Part IV. Efficient determination of anomalous substructures in biomacromolecules using longer X-ray wavelengths."
Acta Crystallogr. D 63:366-380(2007) [PubMed] [Europe PMC] [Abstract]