Interaction
between Metal Cation and Unnatural Peptide
Backbone Mediated by Polarized Water Molecules: Study of Infrared
Spectroscopy and Computations
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Abstract
In
this work, the interaction between metal cation and a model
β-peptide <i>N</i>-ethylpropionamide (NEPA) in aqueous
solution is investigated using infrared absorption spectroscopy. Monovalent
(Na<sup>+</sup>), divalent (Ca<sup>2+</sup>, Mg<sup>2+</sup>), and
trivalent (Al<sup>3+</sup>) metal cations added to NEPA/water solution
at moderate concentrations split the amide-I frequency into a red-
and blue-shifted component. Molecular dynamics simulations of NEPA
in moderate cationic strength are conducted to gain insight into the
structural details of the peptide–salt–water system,
particularly in the vicinity of the amide group. Our results do not
suggest a direct contact between cation and amide oxygen in the solution
phase; otherwise, only a significant red shift in the amide-I frequency
would occur due to the vibrational Stark effect, as evidenced by quantum
chemistry computations. Instead, our results suggest it is the dynamical
interaction between the formed cation/water/anion complexes and the
amide group that causes the observed split in the amide-I peak, which
indicates the presence of both salting-in (red-shifted) and salting-out
(blue-shifted) NEPA species. The presence of dynamic and polarized
water molecules between the amide oxygen and the cation complex is
believed to be the key to the split amide-I peaks in the cation-rich
environment. Our results can be useful to better understand the cationic
Hofmeister series