4.8 Article

Mining anion-aromatic interactions in the Protein Data Bank

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 14, Pages 3984-3998

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2sc00763k

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Funding

  1. PLGrid Infrastructure [POWR.03.02.00-00-I013/16]

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Mutual positioning and non-covalent interactions between anions and aromatic motifs play a crucial role in the functional performance of biological systems. A comprehensive screening of the Protein Data Bank (PDB) led to the identification of numerous unique anion-aromatic motifs, highlighting the importance of ion-π interactions in these motifs.
Mutual positioning and non-covalent interactions in anion-aromatic motifs are crucial for functional performance of biological systems. In this context, regular, comprehensive Protein Data Bank (PDB) screening that involves various scientific points of view and individual critical analysis is of utmost importance. Analysis of anions in spheres with radii of 5 angstrom around all 5- and 6-membered aromatic rings allowed us to distinguish 555 259 unique anion-aromatic motifs, including 92 660 structures out of the 171 588 structural files in the PDB. The use of a scarcely exploited (x, h) coordinate system led to (i) identification of three separate areas of motif accumulation: A - over the ring, B - over the ring-substituent bonds, and C - roughly in the plane of the aromatic ring, and (ii) unprecedented simultaneous comparative description of various anion-aromatic motifs located in these areas. Of the various residues considered, i.e. aminoacids, nucleotides, and ligands, the latter two exhibited a considerable tendency to locate in region A via archetypal anion-pi contacts. The applied model not only enabled statistical quantitative analysis of space around the ring, but also enabled discussion of local intermolecular arrangements, as well as detailed sequence and secondary structure analysis, e.g. anion-Tc interactions in the GNRA tetraloop in RNA and protein helical structures. As a purely practical issue of this work, the new code source for the PDB research was produced, tested and made freely available at https://github.com/chemiczny/PDB_supramolecular_search.

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