4.7 Article

Pyranose Ring Puckering Thermodynamics for Glycan Monosaccharides Associated with Vertebrate Proteins

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010473

Keywords

glucose; GlcNAc; galactose; GalNAc; mannose; xylose; fucose; Neu5Ac; glucuronate; iduronate; tetrahydropyran

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The conformational properties of carbohydrates play an important role in protein structure, but studying carbohydrate-containing systems presents challenges. Molecular dynamics simulations provide a detailed view of biomolecular dynamics, but the accuracy depends on the quality of the force field used. This study shows that the CHARMM force field can accurately model the ring puckering of carbohydrates, which is important for accurately modeling carbohydrate-containing vertebrate biomolecules.
The conformational properties of carbohydrates can contribute to protein structure directly through covalent conjugation in the cases of glycoproteins and proteoglycans and indirectly in the case of transmembrane proteins embedded in glycolipid-containing bilayers. However, there continue to be significant challenges associated with experimental structural biology of such carbohydrate-containing systems. All-atom explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations provide a direct atomic resolution view of biomolecular dynamics and thermodynamics, but the accuracy of the results depends on the quality of the force field parametrization used in the simulations. A key determinant of the conformational properties of carbohydrates is ring puckering. Here, we applied extended system adaptive biasing force (eABF) all-atom explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations to characterize the ring puckering thermodynamics of the ten common pyranose monosaccharides found in vertebrate biology (as represented by the CHARMM carbohydrate force field). The results, along with those for idose, demonstrate that the CHARMM force field reliably models ring puckering across this diverse set of molecules, including accurately capturing the subtle balance between C-4(1) and C-1(4) chair conformations in the cases of iduronate and of idose. This suggests the broad applicability of the force field for accurate modeling of carbohydrate-containing vertebrate biomolecules such as glycoproteins, proteoglycans, and glycolipids.

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