Jockusch R A, Price W D, Williams E R
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-1460.
J Phys Chem A. 1999 Nov 18;103(46):9266-74. doi: 10.1021/jp9931307.
The gas-phase structures of cationized arginine, Arg.M(+), M = Li, Na, K, Rb, and Cs, were studied both by hybrid method density functional theory calculations and experimentally using low-energy collisionally activated and thermal radiative dissociation. Calculations at the B3LYP/LACVP++** level of theory show that the salt-bridge structures in which the arginine is a zwitterion (protonated side chain, deprotonated C-terminus) become more stable than the charge-solvated structures with increasing metal ion size. The difference in energy between the most stable charge-solvated structure and salt-bridge structure of Arg.M(+) increases from -0.7 kcal/mol for Arg.Li(+) to +3.3 kcal/mol for Arg.Cs(+). The stabilities of the salt-bridge and charge-solvated structures reverse between M = Li and Na. These calculations are in good agreement with the results of dissociation experiments. The low-energy dissociation pathways depend on the cation size. Arginine complexed with small cations (Li and Na) loses H(2)O, while arginine complexed with larger cations (K, Rb, and Cs) loses NH(3). Loss of H(2)O must come from a charge-solvated ion, whereas the loss of NH(3) can come from the protonated side chain of a salt-bridge structure. The results of dissociation experiments using several cationized arginine derivatives are consistent with the existence of these two distinct structures. In particular, arginine methyl esters, which cannot form salt bridges, dissociate by loss of methanol, analogous to loss of H(2)O from Arg.M(+); no loss of NH(3) is observed. Although dissociation experiments probe gas-phase structure indirectly, the observed fragmentation pathways are in good agreement with the calculated lowest energy isomers. The combination of the results from experiment and theory provides strong evidence that the structure of arginine-alkali metal ion complexes in the gas phase changes from a charge-solvated structure to a salt-bridge structure as the size of the metal ion increases.
采用密度泛函理论计算的混合方法以及低能碰撞活化和热辐射解离实验,对阳离子化精氨酸(Arg.M(+),M = Li、Na、K、Rb和Cs)的气相结构进行了研究。在B3LYP/LACVP++**理论水平下的计算表明,随着金属离子尺寸的增加,精氨酸为两性离子(质子化侧链,去质子化C端)的盐桥结构比电荷溶剂化结构更稳定。Arg.M(+)最稳定的电荷溶剂化结构与盐桥结构之间的能量差从Arg.Li(+)的-0.7 kcal/mol增加到Arg.Cs(+)的+3.3 kcal/mol。盐桥结构和电荷溶剂化结构的稳定性在M = Li和Na之间发生逆转。这些计算结果与解离实验结果高度吻合。低能解离途径取决于阳离子大小。与小阳离子(Li和Na)络合的精氨酸会失去H₂O,而与大阳离子(K、Rb和Cs)络合的精氨酸会失去NH₃。H₂O的损失一定来自电荷溶剂化离子,而NH₃的损失可能来自盐桥结构的质子化侧链。使用几种阳离子化精氨酸衍生物的解离实验结果与这两种不同结构的存在相一致。特别是不能形成盐桥的精氨酸甲酯,通过失去甲醇而解离,类似于Arg.M(+)失去H₂O;未观察到NH₃的损失。尽管解离实验间接探测气相结构,但观察到的碎裂途径与计算得到的最低能量异构体高度吻合。实验和理论结果的结合提供了有力证据,表明随着金属离子尺寸的增加,气相中精氨酸 - 碱金属离子络合物的结构从电荷溶剂化结构转变为盐桥结构。