| Literature DB >> 32515841 |
Stefano Elli1, Eduardo Stancanelli1, Zhangjie Wang2, Maurice Petitou1, Jian Liu2, Marco Guerrini1.
Abstract
Heparin binds to and activates antithrombin (AT) through a specific pentasaccharide sequence, in which a trisaccharide subsite, containing glucuronic acid (GlcA), has been considered as the initiator in the recognition of the polysaccharide by the protein. Recently it was suggested that sulfated iduronic acid (IdoA2S) could replace this "canonical" GlcA. Indeed, a heparin octasaccharidic sequence obtained by chemoenzymatic synthesis, in which GlcA is replaced with IdoA2S, has been found to similarly bind to and activate antithrombin. By using saturation-transfer-difference (STD) NMR, NOEs, transferred NOEs (tr-NOEs) NMR and molecular dynamics, we show that, upon binding to AT, this IdoA2S unit develops comparable interactions with AT as GlcA. Interestingly, two IdoA2S units, both present in a 1 C4 -2 S0 equilibrium in the unbound saccharide, shift to full 2 S0 and full 1 C4 upon binding to antithrombin, providing the best illustration of the critical role of iduronic acid conformational flexibility in biological systems.Entities:
Keywords: allosterism; allotropy; conformation analysis; glycoconjugates; molecular dynamics; molecular recognition
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32515841 DOI: 10.1002/chem.202001346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236