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      Rigidity and flexibility in the tetrasaccharide linker of proteoglycans from atomic-resolution molecular simulation.

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          Abstract

          Proteoglycans (PGs) are covalent conjugates between protein and carbohydrate (glycosaminoglycans). Certain classes of glycosaminoglycans such as chondroitin sulfate/dermatan sulfate and heparan sulfate utilize a specific tetrasaccharide linker for attachment to the protein component: GlcAβ1-3Galβ1-3Galβ1-4Xylβ1-O-Ser. Toward understanding the conformational preferences of this linker, the present work used all-atom explicit-solvent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations combined with Adaptive Biasing Force (ABF) sampling to determine high-resolution, high-precision conformational free energy maps ΔG(φ, ψ) for each glycosidic linkage between constituent disaccharides, including the variant where GlcA is substituted with IdoA. These linkages are characterized by single, predominant (> 97% occupancy), and broad (45° × 60° for ΔG(φ, ψ) < 1 kcal/mol) free-energy minima, while the Xyl-Ser linkage has two such minima similar in free-energy, and additional flexibility from the Ser sidechain dihedral. Conformational analysis of microsecond-scale standard MD on the complete tetrasaccharide-O-Ser conjugate is consistent with ABF data, suggesting (φ, ψ) probabilities are independent of the linker context, and that the tetrasaccharide acts as a relatively rigid unit whereas significant conformational heterogeneity exists with respect to rotation about bonds connecting Xyl to Ser. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Comput Chem
          Journal of computational chemistry
          Wiley-Blackwell
          1096-987X
          0192-8651
          Jun 15 2017
          : 38
          : 16
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of New England College of Pharmacy, 716 Stevens Avenue, Portland, Maine, 04103.
          [2 ] Graduate School of Biomedical Science and Engineering, University of Maine, 5775 Stodder Hall, Orono, Maine, 04469.
          Article
          10.1002/jcc.24738
          28101951
          8fc7ad29-249a-4ee5-b7e4-b93a232f7d14
          History

          conformation,glycosaminoglycan,glycosidic linkage,linker,molecular dynamics,proteoglycan,tetrasaccharide

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