Sugar–peptidic bond interactions: spectroscopic characterization of a model system
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Date
2017-04-11Author
Camiruaga Leza, Ander
Usabiaga Gutiérrez, Imanol
Insausti Beiro, Aran
León Ona, Iker
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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 19 : 12013-12021 (2017)
Abstract
Sugars are small carbohydrates which perform numerous roles in living
organisms such as storage of energy or as structural components. Modifications of specific sites
within the glycan chain can modulate a carbohydrate’s overall biological function as it
happens with nucleic acids and proteins. Hence, identifying discrete carbohydrate
modifications and
understanding their biological effects is essential. A study of such processes requires of a deep
knowledge of the interaction mechanism at molecular level. Here, we use a combination of laser
spectroscopy in jets and quantum mechanical calculations to characterize the interaction between
phenyl-β-D-glucopyranoside and N-methylacetamide as a model to understand the interaction
between a sugar and a peptide. The most stable structure of the molecular aggregate shows that
the main interaction between the peptide fragment and the sugar proceeds via a C=O•••H-O2
hydrogen bond. A second conformer was also found, in which the peptide establishes an C=O•••H-
O6 hydrogen bond with the hydroxymethyl substituent of the sugar unit. All the conformers
present an additional interaction point with the aromatic ring. This particular preference of the
peptide for the hydroxyl close to the aromatic ring could explain why glycogenin uses tyrosine in
order convert glucose to glycogen by exposing the O4H hydroxyl group for the other glucoses for
the polymerization to take place.