The CH-π Interaction in Protein-Carbohydrate Binding: Bioinformatics and In Vitro Quantification.
Chemistry
; 26(47): 10769-10780, 2020 Aug 21.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32208534
The molecular recognition of carbohydrates by proteins plays a key role in many biological processes including immune response, pathogen entry into a cell, and cell-cell adhesion (e.g., in cancer metastasis). Carbohydrates interact with proteins mainly through hydrogen bonding, metal-ion-mediated interaction, and non-polar dispersion interactions. The role of dispersion-driven CH-π interactions (stacking) in protein-carbohydrate recognition has been underestimated for a long time considering the polar interactions to be the main forces for saccharide interactions. However, over the last few years it turns out that non-polar interactions are equally important. In this study, we analyzed the CH-π interactions employing bioinformatics (data mining, structural analysis), several experimental (isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), X-ray crystallography), and computational techniques. The Protein Data Bank (PDB) has been used as a source of structural data. The PDB contains over 12 000 protein complexes with carbohydrates. Stacking interactions are very frequently present in such complexes (about 39 % of identified structures). The calculations and the ITC measurement results suggest that the CH-π stacking contribution to the overall binding energy ranges from 4 up to 8â
kcal mol-1 . All the results show that the stacking CH-π interactions in protein-carbohydrate complexes can be considered to be a driving force of the binding in such complexes.
Key words
Full text:
1
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Carbohydrates
/
Carbon
/
Proteins
/
Computational Biology
/
Hydrogen
Language:
En
Journal:
Chemistry
Journal subject:
QUIMICA
Year:
2020
Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Czech Republic