The Structure of the Protonated Serine Octamer

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Abstract

The amino acid serine has long been known to form a protonated "magic-number" cluster containing eight monomer units that shows an unusually high abundance in mass spectra and has a remarkable homochiral preference. Despite many experimental and theoretical studies, there is no consensus on a Ser8H+ structure that is in agreement with all experimental observations. Here, we present the structure of Ser8H+ determined by a combination of infrared spectroscopy and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. The three-dimensional structure that we determine is ∼25 kcal mol-1 more stable than the previous most stable published structure and explains both the homochiral preference and the experimentally observed facile replacement of two serine units.

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Scutelnic, V., Perez, M. A. S., Marianski, M., Warnke, S., Gregor, A., Rothlisberger, U., … Seo, J. (2018). The Structure of the Protonated Serine Octamer. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 140(24), 7554–7560. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.8b02118

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