RESUMO
Discovering the low-energy conformations of a molecule is of great interest to computational chemists, with applications in in silico materials design and drug discovery. In this paper, we propose a variable neighbourhood search heuristic for the conformational search problem. Using the structure of a molecule, neighbourhoods are chosen to allow for the efficient use of a binary quadratic optimizer for conformational search. The method is flexible with respect to the choice of molecular force field and the number of discretization levels in the search space, and can be further generalized to take advantage of higher-order binary polynomial optimizers. It is well-suited for the use of devices such as quantum annealers. After carefully defining neighbourhoods, the method easily adapts to the size and topology of these devices, allowing for seamless scaling alongside their future improvements.
RESUMO
Glucans are fungal cell wall polysaccharides which stimulate innate immune responses. We determined the minimum unit ligand that would bind to glucan receptors on human U937 cells using laminarin-derived pentaose, hexaose, and heptaose glucan polymers. When U937 membranes were pretreated with the oligosaccharides and passed over a glucan surface, only the heptasaccharide inhibited the interaction of glucan with membrane receptors at a K(d) of 31 microM (95% CI 20-48 microM) and 100% inhibition. However, the glucan heptasaccharide did not stimulate U937 monocyte NFkappaB signaling, nor did it increase survival in a murine model of polymicrobial sepsis. Laminarin, a larger and more complex glucan polymer (M(w) = 7700 g/mol), only partially inhibited binding (61 +/- 4%) at a K(d) of 2.6 microM (99% CI 1.7-4.2 microM) with characteristics of a single binding site. These results indicate that a heptasaccharide is the smallest unit ligand recognized by macrophage glucan receptors. The data also indicate the presence of at least two glucan-binding sites on U937 cells and that the binding sites on human monocyte/macrophages can discriminate between glucan polymers. The heptasaccharide and laminarin were receptor antagonists, but they were not receptor agonists with respect to activation of NFkappaB-dependent signaling pathways or protection against experimental sepsis.