Mallon Christopher J, Hassani Majid, Osofsky Ellia H, Familo Savannah B, Fenlon Edward E, Tucker Matthew J
Department of Chemistry, University of Nevada, Reno, 1664 N. Virginia Street, Reno, Nevada 89557, United States.
Department of Chemistry, Franklin & Marshall College, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17604-3003, United States.
J Am Chem Soc. 2025 Mar 5;147(9):7264-7273. doi: 10.1021/jacs.4c12716. Epub 2024 Dec 19.
Hydration dynamics and solvent viscosity play critical roles in the structure and function of biomolecules. An overwhelming body of evidence suggests that protein and membrane fluctuations are closely linked to solvent fluctuations. While extensive research exists on the use of vibrational probes to detect local interactions and solvent dynamics, fewer studies have explored how the behavior of these reporters changes in response to bulk viscosity. To address this gap, two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy (2D IR) was employed in this study to investigate the ultrafast hydration dynamics around a cyanamide (NCN) probe attached to a nucleoside, deoxycytidine, in aqueous solutions with varying glycerol content. The use of a small vibrational probe on a targeted nucleic acid offers the potential to capture more localized hydration dynamics than alternative methods. The time scales for the frequency correlation decays were found to increase linearly with bulk viscosity, ranging from 0.9 to 11.4 ps over viscosities of 0.96-49.1 cP. Additionally, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were performed to model the local hydration dynamics around the NCN probe. Interestingly, increasing the glycerol content did not significantly alter the hydration of the deoxycytidine. The MD simulations further suggested that the NCN probe's frequency fluctuations were primarily influenced by the dynamics of water in the second solvation shell. Cage correlation functions, which measure the movement of water molecules in and out of the second solvation shell, exhibited decays that closely matched those of the frequency-fluctuation correlation function (FFCF). These findings offer new insights into hydration dynamics and the impact of viscosity on biological systems.
水合动力学和溶剂粘度在生物分子的结构和功能中起着关键作用。大量证据表明,蛋白质和膜的波动与溶剂波动密切相关。虽然关于使用振动探针检测局部相互作用和溶剂动力学已有广泛研究,但较少有研究探讨这些报告分子的行为如何响应本体粘度而变化。为了填补这一空白,本研究采用二维红外光谱(2D IR)来研究连接到核苷脱氧胞苷上的氰胺(NCN)探针在不同甘油含量水溶液中的超快水合动力学。在靶向核酸上使用小的振动探针比其他方法有潜力捕获更局部的水合动力学。发现频率相关衰减的时间尺度随本体粘度线性增加,在0.96 - 49.1 cP的粘度范围内从0.9到11.4皮秒。此外,进行了分子动力学(MD)模拟以模拟NCN探针周围的局部水合动力学。有趣的是,增加甘油含量并没有显著改变脱氧胞苷的水合作用。MD模拟进一步表明,NCN探针的频率波动主要受第二溶剂化壳层中水的动力学影响。笼状相关函数测量水分子进出第二溶剂化壳层的运动,其衰减与频率波动相关函数(FFCF)的衰减密切匹配。这些发现为水合动力学以及粘度对生物系统的影响提供了新的见解。