Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are anionic polysaccharides, which participate in key processes in the extracellular matrix by interactions
with protein targets. Due to their charged nature, accurate consideration of electrostatic and water-mediated interactions
is indispensable for understanding GAGs binding properties. However, solvent is often overlooked in molecular recognition
studies. Here we analyze the abundance of solvent in GAG-protein interfaces and investigate the challenges of adding explicit
solvent in GAG-protein docking experiments. We observe PDB GAG-protein interfaces being significantly more hydrated than protein–protein
interfaces. Furthermore, by applying molecular dynamics approaches we estimate that about half of GAG-protein interactions
are water-mediated. With a dataset of eleven GAG-protein complexes we analyze how solvent inclusion affects Autodock 3, eHiTs,
MOE and FlexX docking. We develop an approach to de novo place explicit solvent into the binding site prior to docking, which
uses the GRID program to predict positions of waters and to locate possible areas of solvent displacement upon ligand binding.
To investigate how solvent placement affects docking performance, we compare these results with those obtained by taking into
account information about the solvent position in the crystal structure. In general, we observe that inclusion of solvent
improves the results obtained with these methods. Our data show that Autodock 3 performs best, though it experiences difficulties
to quantitatively reproduce experimental data on specificity of heparin/heparan sulfate disaccharides binding to IL-8. Our
work highlights the current challenges of introducing solvent in protein-GAGs recognition studies, which is crucial for exploiting
the full potential of these molecules for rational engineering.
Keywords Glycosaminoglycan-protein interfaces – GRID – Docking – Interfacial solvent – Molecular dynamics – SCOWLP