Histo-blood group ABH antigens serve as recognition sites for infectious microorganisms and tissue lectins in intercellular
communication, e.g. in tumor progression. Thus, they are of interest as a starting point for drug design. In this respect,
potent non-hydrolysable derivatives such as thioglycosides are of special interest. As prerequisite to enable estimations
of ligand properties relative to their natural counterparts, conformational properties of the thioglycosidic derivatives of
ABH trisaccharides and their disaccharide units were calculated using systematic and filtered systematic searches with the
MM4 force field. Parameters for the glycosidic torsions of thioglycosides were independently derived from ab initio calculations.
The resulting energy deviations required a reparameterization of MM4 to a new parameter set called MM4R. The data sets obtained
using MM4R reveal that the thioglycosides have somewhat increased levels of flexibility about the major low-energy conformations
shared with the corresponding O-glycosides. In the trisaccharides, the thiosubstitution of the Gal[NAc]α1-3Gal linkage leads
to a preference for a conformation which is the secondary minimum of the natural counterparts. This conformation also generates
contacts between the
N-acetyl group and the fucose moiety in the blood group A derivative. Calculations further indicate that thiosubstitution of
only the Fucα1-2Gal linkage does not affect the conformational preferences compared to the natural trisaccharide. Thiosubstitution
of both linkages in the trisaccharide results in increased flexibility but the favored conformation of the natural trisaccharides
is preferred. The study suggests that thioglycoside derivatives of ABH antigens could have pharmaceutical interest as ligands
of lectins and other carbohydrate-binding proteins.
Keywords Blood group antigens - Drug design - Lectins - Molecular mechanics - Thioglycoside