Abstract

Amylose, a component of starch with increasing biotechnological significance, is a linear glucose polysaccharide that self-organizes into single- and double-helical assemblies. Starch granule packing, gelation and inclusion-complex formation result from finely balanced macromolecular kinetics that have eluded precise experimental quantification. Here, graphics processing unit (GPU) accelerated multi-microsecond aqueous simulations are employed to explore conformational kinetics in model single- and double-stranded amylose. The all-atom dynamics concur with prior X-ray and NMR data while surprising and previously overlooked microsecond helix-coil, glycosidic linkage and pyranose ring exchange are hypothesized. In a dodecasaccharide, single-helical collapse was correlated with linkages and rings transitioning from their expected syn and (4)C1 chair conformers. The associated microsecond exchange rates were dependent on proximity to the termini and chain length (comparing hexa- and trisaccharides), while kinetic features of dodecasaccharide linkage and ring flexing are proposed to be a good model for polymers. Similar length double-helices were stable on microsecond timescales but the parallel configuration was sturdier than the antiparallel equivalent. In both, tertiary organization restricted local chain dynamics, implying that simulations of single amylose strands cannot be extrapolated to dimers. Unbiased multi-microsecond simulations of amylose are proposed as a valuable route to probing macromolecular kinetics in water, assessing the impact of chemical modifications on helical stability and accelerating the development of new biotechnologies.

Highlights

  • Starch is a major plant energy storage material comprising a source-dependent mix of two a(1 - 4) linked D-glucose (Glc) polysaccharides: linear amylose and a(1 - 6) branched amylopectin

  • The anti conformer, while consistent with the band-flipped geometry in cycloamyloses observed by X-ray diffraction,[14,15] was predicted to be populated for at most 4% in the 10 ms trajectories; such low populations are unlikely to be detectable by standard spectroscopic experiments, perhaps explaining why they have not been reported previously

  • Multi-ms simulations of model single- and double-stranded amyloses using the GLYCAM0639 force-field were found to be in good agreement with previous experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Starch is a major plant energy storage material comprising a source-dependent mix of two a(1 - 4) linked D-glucose (Glc) polysaccharides: linear amylose and a(1 - 6) branched amylopectin. A helical amylose structure was first reported in 1943.7 Subsequent X-ray studies have revealed three principal crystal allomorphs: single-helical V-type amylose and the A- and B-type

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