Liquid–Vapor Interfacial Properties of Aqueous
Solutions of Guanidinium and Methyl Guanidinium Chloride: Influence
of Molecular Orientation on Interface Fluctuations
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Abstract
The
guanidinium cation (C(NH<sub>2</sub>)<sub>3</sub><sup>+</sup>) is
a highly stable cation in aqueous solution due to its efficient
solvation by water molecules and resonance stabilization of the charge.
Its salts increase the solubility of nonpolar molecules (“salting-in”)
and decrease the ordering of water. It is one of the strongest denaturants
used in biophysical studies of protein folding. We investigate the
behavior of guanidinium and its derivative, methyl guanidinium (an
amino acid analogue) at the air–water surface, using atomistic
molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and calculation of potentials
of mean force. Methyl guanidinium cation is less excluded from the
air–water surface than guanidinium cation, but both cations
show orientational dependence of surface affinity. Parallel orientations
of the guanidinium ring (relative to the Gibbs dividing surface) show
pronounced free energy minima in the interfacial region, while ring
orientations perpendicular to the GDS exhibit no discernible surface
stability. Calculations of surface fluctuations demonstrate that,
near the air–water surface, the parallel-oriented cations generate
significantly greater interfacial fluctuations compared to other orientations,
which induces more long-ranged perturbations and solvent density redistribution.
Our results suggest a strong correlation with induced interfacial
fluctuations and ion surface stability. These results have implications
for interpreting molecular-level, mechanistic action of this osmolyte’s
interaction with hydrophobic interfaces as they impact protein denaturation
(solubilization)