The price of flexibility-a case study on septanoses as pyranose mimetics

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Abstract

Seven-membered ring mimetics of mannose were studied as ligands for the mannose-specific bacterial lectin FimH, which plays an essential role in the first step of urinary tract infections (UTI). A competitive binding assay and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments indicated an approximately ten-fold lower affinity for the seven-membered ring mannose mimetic 2-O-n-heptyl-1,6-anhydro-d-glycero-d-galactitol (7) compared to n-heptyl α-d-mannopyranoside (2), resulting exclusively from a loss of conformational entropy. Investigations by solution NMR, X-ray crystallography, and molecular modeling revealed that 7 establishes a superimposable H-bond network compared to mannoside 2, but at the price of a high entropic penalty due to the loss of its pronounced conformational flexibility. These results underscore the importance of having access to the complete thermodynamic profile of a molecular interaction to "rescue" ligands from entropic penalties with an otherwise perfect fit to the protein binding site.

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Sager, C. P., Fiege, B., Zihlmann, P., Vannam, R., Rabbani, S., Jakob, R. P., … Ernst, B. (2018). The price of flexibility-a case study on septanoses as pyranose mimetics. Chemical Science, 9(3), 646–654. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7sc04289b

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