Computational simulations on the taste mechanism of steviol glycosides based on their interactions with receptor proteins

Steviol glycoside (SG) is a potential natural sugar substitute. The taste of various SG structures differ significantly, while their mechanism has not been thoroughly investigated. To investigate the taste mechanism, molecular docking simulations of SGs with sweet taste receptor TAS1R2 and bitter ta...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biological macromolecules 2024-01, Vol.255, p.128110-128110, Article 128110
Hauptverfasser: Yuan, Yuying, Yiasmin, Mst Nushrat, Tristanto, Nerissa Arviana, Chen, Yujie, Liu, Yaxian, Guan, Shuyi, Wang, Zijie, Hua, Xiao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Steviol glycoside (SG) is a potential natural sugar substitute. The taste of various SG structures differ significantly, while their mechanism has not been thoroughly investigated. To investigate the taste mechanism, molecular docking simulations of SGs with sweet taste receptor TAS1R2 and bitter taste receptor TAS2R4 were conducted. The result suggested that four flexible coils (regions) in TAS1R2 constructed a geometry open pocket in space responsible for the binding of sweeteners. Amino acids that form hydrogen bonds with sweeteners are located in different receptor regions. In bitterness simulation, fewer hydrogen bonds were formed with the increased size of SG molecules. Particularly, there was no interaction between RM and TAS2R4 due to its size, which explains the non-bitterness of RM. Molecular dynamics simulations further indicated that the number of hydrogen bonds between SGs and TAS1R2 was maintained during a simulation time of 50 ns, while sucrose was gradually released from the binding site, leading to the break of interaction. Conclusively, the high sweetness intensity of SG can be attributed to its durative concurrent interaction with the receptor's binding site, and such behavior was determined by the structure feature of SG.
ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.128110