Despite the essential role of glycoconjugates in biological processes, molecular visualization software fail to recognize carbohydrates as a unified class of macromolecules. Although proteins and DNA are detected by default, carbohydrate residues are treated as ‘non‐standard’ (HETATM) and grouped together with solvent and ions. As a result, carbohydrates currently lack a simplistic representation for 3D structure, and are predominantly visualized with all atoms displayed. Discerning the glycan sequence from an atomic view is challenging for short fragments and prohibitive for oligosaccharides. The following work describes the implementation of algorithms for the automatic identification and representation of carbohydrate moieties within the highly‐cited Visual Molecular Dynamics (VMD) program. Carbohydrate residues are now detected with a robust algorithm that distinguishes carbohydrate moieties from other ring‐based structures based upon atomic coordinates, rather than residue names. A 3D adaptation of the symbolic nomenclature developed by the Consortium for Functional Glycomics (CFG) has been implemented as a cartoon representation of carbohydrate residues, analogous to the canonical depiction of protein backbones with ribbons. Incorporation of a standard representation scheme familiar to the glycobiology community should improve adoption and allow researchers to more efficiently convey complex structural concepts pertaining to carbohydrate‐containing biomolecules (i.e. glycoforms of proteins, ligand sequences, etc.). Alternatives to the 3D‐CFG representation have also been included to enhance the atomic view of carbohydrate moieties. These additions to VMD finally create a program capable of treating carbohydrates as a unified class of molecules, complete with custom representations.Support or Funding InformationThe authors thank the NIH for support (R01 GM100058).
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