학술논문

O‑Acetyl Migration within the Sialic Acid Side Chain: A Mechanistic Study Using the Ab Initio Nanoreactor
Document Type
article
Source
Biochemistry. 61(18)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Organic Chemistry
Chemical Sciences
Acetylation
Esters
Glycerol
N-Acetylneuraminic Acid
Nanotechnology
Sialic Acids
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical biochemistry and metabolomics
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
Many disease-causing viruses target sialic acids on the surface of host cells. Some viruses bind preferentially to sialic acids with O-acetyl modification at the hydroxyl group of C7, C8, or C9 on the glycerol-like side chain. Studies of proteins binding to sialosides containing O-acetylated sialic acids are crucial in understanding the related diseases but experimentally difficult due to the lability of the ester group. We recently showed that O-acetyl migration among hydroxyl groups of C7, C8, and C9 in sialic acids occurs in all directions in a pH-dependent manner. In the current study, we elucidate a full mechanistic pathway for the migration of O-acetyl among C7, C8, and C9. We used an ab initio nanoreactor to explore potential reaction pathways and density functional theory, pKa calculations, and umbrella sampling to investigate elementary steps of interest. We found that when a base is present, migration is easy in any direction and involves three key steps: deprotonation of the hydroxyl group, cyclization between the two carbons, and the migration of the O-acetyl group. This dynamic equilibrium may play a defensive role against pathogens that evolve to gain entry to the cell by binding selectively to one acetylation state.