Glycerol is a symmetrical, small biomolecule with high flexibility in molecular conformations. Using a H-NMR spectroscopic Karplus analysis in our way, we analyzed a rotational isomerism in the glycero backbone which generates three kinds of staggered conformers, namely gt (-), gg (-), and tg (-), at each of -1,2 and -2,3 positions. The Karplus analysis has disclosed that the three rotamers are consistently equilibrated in water keeping the relation of 'gt:gg:tg = 50:30:20 (%)' at a wide range of concentrations (5 mM~540 mM). The observed relation means that glycerol in water favors those symmetric conformers placing 1,2,3-triol groups in a geometry. We have found also that the rotational isomerism is remarkably changed when the solvent is replaced with DMSO- or dimethylformamide (DMF-). In these solvents, glycerol gives a relation of 'gt:gg:tg = 40:30:30 (%)', which means that a remarkable shift occurs in the equilibrium between gt and tg conformers. By this shift, glycerol turns to also take non-symmetric conformers orienting one of the two vicinal diols in an antiperiplanar geometry.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9916874 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24032766 | DOI Listing |
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