Abstract
Fibre X-ray diffraction patterns have been obtained from oriented, semi-crystalline films of the Klebsiella capsular polysaccharide secrotype K57. K57 is a polytetrasaccharide that contains galactosyluronic acid, mannosyl, and galactosyl residues in the backbone, and an additional mannosyl group as a side-appendage. The simplest interpretation of the diffraction pattern is that the molecule crystallizes as a three-fold helix with an axially projected repeat of 1.143 nm which correlates directly with the chemical repeat. The chain is highly extended, even though it incorporates a 1,2-diaxial linkage in the main backbone. Molecular models have been built using least-squares techniques to minimise interatomic compression and simultaneously meet the observed helical parameters. These models have been compared with the experimental data by using cylindrically averaged, Fouriertransform calculations.
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