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Side chain

About: Side chain is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 22515 publications have been published within this topic receiving 444043 citations. The topic is also known as: pendant chain.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Together, these backbone and side chain modifications (hereafter called ff14SB) not only better reproduced their benchmarks, but also improved secondary structure content in small peptides and reproduction of NMR χ1 scalar coupling measurements for proteins in solution.
Abstract: Molecular mechanics is powerful for its speed in atomistic simulations, but an accurate force field is required. The Amber ff99SB force field improved protein secondary structure balance and dynamics from earlier force fields like ff99, but weaknesses in side chain rotamer and backbone secondary structure preferences have been identified. Here, we performed a complete refit of all amino acid side chain dihedral parameters, which had been carried over from ff94. The training set of conformations included multidimensional dihedral scans designed to improve transferability of the parameters. Improvement in all amino acids was obtained as compared to ff99SB. Parameters were also generated for alternate protonation states of ionizable side chains. Average errors in relative energies of pairs of conformations were under 1.0 kcal/mol as compared to QM, reduced 35% from ff99SB. We also took the opportunity to make empirical adjustments to the protein backbone dihedral parameters as compared to ff99SB. Multiple sm...

6,367 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest that small numbers of substitutions in antibodies, such as those presumably introduced by somatic mutation, may in some situations be effective in altering antigen-binding specificity.
Abstract: S107, a phosphocholine-binding myeloma protein, has been cloned in soft agar, and an antigen-binding variant has been isolated and characterized. The variant does not bind phosphocholine attached to carrier or as free hapten in solution but does retain antigenic determinants (idiotypes) of the parent. Chain recombination experiments suggest that the defect in binding is entirely in the heavy chain. Amino acid sequence analysis showed a single substitution--glutamic acid to alanine at position 35--in the first hypervariable or complementarity-determining region. In terms of the three-dimensional model of the phosphocholine-binding site, glutamic acid-35 provides a hydrogen bond to tyrosine-94 of the light chain that appears to be critical for stability of this portion of the binding site. The removal of this bond and the presence of the smaller alanine side chain is thus consistent with the loss in binding activity. These results suggest that small numbers of substitutions in antibodies, such as those presumably introduced by somatic mutation, may in some situations be effective in altering antigen-binding specificity.

2,639 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work has used information about interatomic distances, bond angles, and other configurational parameters to construct two reasonable hydrogen-bonded helical configurations for the polypeptide chain; it is likely that these configurations constitute an important part of the structure of both fibrous and globular proteins, as well as of syntheticpolypeptides.
Abstract: During the past fifteen years we have been attacking the problem of the structure of proteins in several ways. One of these ways is the complete and accurate determination of the crystal structure of amino acids, peptides, and other simple substances related to proteins, in order that information about interatomic distances, bond angles, and other configurational parameters might be obtained that would permit the reliable prediction of reasonable configurations for the polypeptide chain. We have now used this information to construct two reasonable hydrogen-bonded helical configurations for the polypeptide chain; we think that it is likely that these configurations constitute an important part of the structure of both fibrous and globular proteins, as well as of synthetic polypeptides. A letter announcing their discovery was published last year [1]. The problem that we have set ourselves is that of finding all hydrogen-bonded structures for a single polypeptide chain, in which the residues are equivalent (except for the differences in the side chain R). An amino acid residue (other than glycine) has no symmetry elements. The general operation of conversion of one residue of a single chain into a second residue equivalent to the first is accordingly a rotation about an axis accompanied by translation along the axis. Hence the only configurations for a chain compatible with our postulate of equivalence of the residues are helical configurations. For rotational angle 180° the helical configurations may degenerate to a simple chain with all of the principal atoms, C, C' (the carbonyl carbon), N, and O, in the same plane.

2,506 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: As the length of the alkyl chain increases, the nonpolar domains become larger and more connected and cause swelling of the ionic network, in a manner analogous to systems exhibiting microphase separation.
Abstract: Nanometer-scale structuring in room-temperature ionic liquids is observed using molecular simulation. The ionic liquids studied belong to the 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium family with hexafluorophosphate or with bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide as the anions, [Cnmim][PF6] or [Cnmim][(CF3SO2)2N], respectively. They were represented, for the first time in a simulation study focusing on long-range structures, by an all-atom force field of the AMBER/OPLS_AA family containing parameters developed specifically for these compounds. For ionic liquids with alkyl side chains longer than or equal to C4, aggregation of the alkyl chains in nonpolar domains is observed. These domains permeate a tridimensional network of ionic channels formed by anions and by the imidazolium rings of the cations. The nanostructures can be visualized in a conspicuous way simply by color coding the two types of domains (in this work, we chose red = polar and green = nonpolar). As the length of the alkyl chain increases, the nonpolar domai...

1,668 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported data from infrared absorption (FTIR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies that correlate the molecular conformation of oligo(ethylene glycol) (OEG)-terminated self-assembled alkanethiolate monolayers (SAMs) with the ability of these films to resist protein adsorption.
Abstract: We report data from infrared absorption (FTIR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies that correlate the molecular conformation of oligo(ethylene glycol) (OEG)-terminated self-assembled alkanethiolate monolayers (SAMs) with the ability of these films to resist protein adsorption. We studied three different SAMs of alkanethiolates on both evaporated Au and Ag surfaces. The SAMs were formed from substituted 1-undecanethiols with either a hydroxyl-terminated hexa(ethylene glycol) (EG6-OH) or a methoxy-terminated tri(ethylene glycol) (EG3-OMe) end group, or a substituted 1-tridecanethiol chain with a methoxy-terminated tri(ethylene glycol) end group and a −CH2OCH3 side chain at the C-12 atom (EG[3,1]-OMe). The infrared data of EG6-OH-terminated SAMs on both Au and Ag surfaces reveal the presence of a crystalline helical OEG phase, coexisting with amorphous OEG moieties; the EG[3,1]-OMe-terminated alkanethiolates on Au and Ag show a lower absolute coverage and greater disorder than the two other compounds. The...

1,323 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023330
2022737
2021451
2020519
2019576
2018683