Molecular dynamics investigation of dipeptide - Transition metal salts in aqueous solutions

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2010

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society service@acs.org

Abstract

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of glycylglycine dipeptide with transition metal ions (Mn2+, Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, and Zn2+) in aqueous solutions have been carried out to get an insight into the solvation structure, intermolecular interactions, and salt effects in these systems. The solvation structure and hydrogen bonding were described in terms of radial distribution function (RDF) and spatial distribution function (SDF). The dynamical properties of the solvation structure were also analyzed in terms of diffusion and residence times. The simulation results show the presence of a well-defined first hydration shell around the dipeptide, with water molecules forming hydrogen bonds to the polar groups of the dipeptide. This shell is, however, affected by the strong electric field of divalent metal ions, which at higher ion concentrations lead to the shift in the dipeptide-water RDFs. Higher salt concentrations lead also to increased residence times and slower diffusion rates. In general, smaller ions (Cu2+, Zn2+) demonstrate stronger binding to dipeptide than the larger ones (Fe2+, Mn 2+). Simulations do not show any stronger association of peptide molecules indicating their dissolution in water. The above results may be of potential interest to future researchers on these molecular interactions. © 2010 American Chemical Society.

Description

Keywords

Dissolution, Distribution functions, Electric fields, Hydrogen, Hydrogen bonds, Manganese, Metal ions, Molecular dynamics, Molecules, Peptides, Solutions, Solvation, Zinc, Aqueous solutions, Diffusion rate, Dipeptide, Divalent metal ion, Dynamical properties, First hydration shell, Glycyl-glycine, Hydrogen bondings, Intermolecular interactions, Ion concentrations, Molecular dynamics simulations, Polar groups, Radial distribution functions, Residence time, Salt concentration, Salt effect, Simulation result, Solvation structure, Spatial distribution functions, Strong electric fields, Transition metal salts, Water molecule, Transition metal compounds

Citation

Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2010, 114, 49, pp. 16632-16640

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By