Troitzsch R Z, Vass H, Hossack W J, Martyna G J, Crain J
School of Physics, The University of Edinburgh, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JZ, United Kingdom.
J Phys Chem B. 2008 Apr 10;112(14):4290-7. doi: 10.1021/jp076713m. Epub 2008 Mar 15.
Free proline amino acid is a natural cryoprotectant expressed by numerous organisms under low-temperature stress. Previous reports have suggested that complex assemblies underlie its functional properties. We investigate here aqueous proline solutions as a function of temperature using combinations of Raman spectroscopy, Rayleigh-Brillouin light scattering, and molecular dynamics simulations with the view to revealing the molecular origins of the mixtures' functionality as a cryoprotectant. The evolution of the Brillouin frequency shifts and line widths with temperature shows that, above a critical proline concentration, the water-like dynamics is suppressed and viscoelastic behavior emerges: Here, the Landau-Placzek ratio also shows a temperature-independent maximum arising from concentration fluctuations. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that the water-water correlations in the mixtures depend much more weakly on temperature than does bulk water. By contrast, the water OH Raman bands exhibit strong red-shifts on cooling similar to those seen in ices; however, no evidence of ice lattice phonons is observed in the low-frequency spectrum. We attribute this primarily to enhanced proline-water hydrogen bonding. In general, the picture that emerges is that aqueous proline is a heterogeneous mixture on molecular length scales (characterized by significant concentration fluctuations rather than well-defined aggregates). Simulations reveal that proline also appears to suppress the normal dependence of water structure on temperature and preserves the ambient-temperature correlations even in very cold solutions. The water structure in cold proline solutions therefore appears to be similar to that at a higher effective temperature. This, coupled with the emergence of glassy dynamics offers a molecular explanation for the functional properties of proline as a cryoprotectant without the need to invoke previously proposed complex aggregates.
游离脯氨酸氨基酸是许多生物体在低温胁迫下表达的一种天然抗冻剂。先前的报道表明,其功能特性基于复杂的组装结构。我们在此使用拉曼光谱、瑞利 - 布里渊光散射以及分子动力学模拟相结合的方法,研究脯氨酸水溶液随温度的变化情况,旨在揭示该混合物作为抗冻剂的功能的分子起源。布里渊频移和线宽随温度的变化表明,在临界脯氨酸浓度以上,类似水的动力学受到抑制,粘弹性行为出现:在此,朗道 - 普拉克比率也显示出由浓度涨落引起的与温度无关的最大值。分子动力学模拟表明,混合物中的水 - 水相关性对温度的依赖性比 bulk water 弱得多。相比之下,水的 OH 拉曼带在冷却时表现出强烈的红移,类似于在冰中观察到的情况;然而,在低频光谱中未观察到冰晶格声子的证据。我们将此主要归因于脯氨酸 - 水氢键的增强。总体而言,呈现出的情况是,脯氨酸水溶液在分子长度尺度上是一种非均匀混合物(其特征是显著的浓度涨落而非明确界定的聚集体)。模拟表明,脯氨酸似乎还抑制了水结构对温度的正常依赖性,即使在非常冷的溶液中也能保持环境温度下相关性。因此,冷脯氨酸溶液中的水结构似乎与在较高有效温度下的水结构相似。这与玻璃态动力学的出现相结合,为脯氨酸作为抗冻剂的功能特性提供了分子解释,而无需援引先前提出的复杂聚集体。