PubMed:11996839 JSONTXT 16 Projects

The crystal structure of the alpha-cellobiose.2 NaI.2 H(2)O complex in the context of related structures and conformational analysis. The crystal structure of beta-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)-alpha-D-glucopyranose (alpha-cellobiose) in a complex with water and NaI was determined with Mo K(alpha) radiation at 150 K to R=0.027. The space group is P2(1) and unit cell dimensions are a=9.0188, b=12.2536, c=10.9016 A, beta=97.162 degrees. There are no direct hydrogen bonds among cellobiose molecules, and the usual intramolecular hydrogen bond between O-3 and O-5' is replaced by a bridge involving Na+, O-3, O-5', and O-6'. Both Na+ have sixfold coordination. One I(-) accepts six donor hydroxyl groups and three C-H***I(-) hydrogen bonds. The other accepts three hydroxyls, one Na+, and five C-H***I(-) hydrogen bonds. Linkage torsion angles phi(O-5) and psi(C-5) are -73.6 and -105.3 degrees, respectively (phi(H)=47.1 degrees and psi(H)=14.6 degrees ), probably induced by the Na+ bridge. This conformation is in a separate cluster in phi,psi space from most similar linkages. Both C-6-O-H and C-6'-O-H are gg, while the C-6'-O-H groups from molecules not in the cluster have gt conformations. Hybrid molecular mechanics/quantum mechanics calculations show <1.2 kcal/mol strain for any of the small-molecule structures. Extrapolation of the NaI cellobiose geometry to a cellulose molecule gives a left-handed helix with 2.9 residues per turn. The energy map and small-molecule crystal structures imply that cellulose helices having 2.5 and 3.0 residues per turn are left-handed.

Annnotations TAB TSV DIC JSON TextAE-old TextAE

  • Denotations: 0
  • Blocks: 0
  • Relations: 0