Intelectin-2 is a broad-spectrum antimicrobial lectin.

Nature communications
Authors
Abstract

Mammals regulate the localization, composition, and activity of their native microbiota at colonization sites. Lectins residing at these sites influence microbial populations, but their functional roles are often unclear. Intelectins are found in chordates at mucosal barriers, but their functions are not well characterized. In this study, we find that mouse intelectin-2 (mItln2) and human intelectin-2 (hItln2) engage and crosslink mucins via carbohydrate recognition. Moreover, both lectins recognize microbes within native microbial communities, including gram-positive and gram-negative isolates from the respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts. This ability to engage mammalian and microbial glycans arises from calcium-coordinated binding of carbohydrate residues within mucus and microbial surfaces. Microbes, but not human cells, bound by mItln2 or hItln2, suffer a loss of viability. These findings underscore the crucial antimicrobial role of mammalian intelectin-2 in mucosal defense, where it plays offensive (microbial killing) and defensive (mucus crosslinking) roles in regulating microbial colonization.

Year of Publication
2026
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
17
Issue
1
Pages
231
Date Published
01/2026
ISSN
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-67099-4
PubMed ID
41530121
Links