| Structure and dynamics of hydronium in the ion channel gramicidin A Biophysical Journal, Volume 70, Issue 5, 1 May 1996, Pages 2043-2051 D.E. Sagnella and G.A. Voth Abstract The effects of the hydronium ion, H(3)0+, on the structure of the ion channel gramicidin A and the hydrogen-bonded network of waters within the channel were studied to help elucidate a possible mechanism for proton transport through the channel. Several classical molecular dynamics studies were carried out with the hydronium in either the center of a gramicidin monomer or in the dimer junction. Structural reorganization of the channel backbone was observed for different hydronium positions, which were most apparent when the hydronium was within the monomer. In both cases the average O-O distance between the hydronium ion and its nearest neighbor water molecule was found to be approximately 2.55 A, indicating a rather strong hydrogen bond. Importantly, a subsequent break in the hydrogen-bonded network between the nearest neighbor and the next-nearest neighbor(approximately 2.7 -3.0 A) was repeatedly observed. Moreover, the carbonyl groups of gramicidin A were found to interact with the charge on the hydronium ion, helping in its stabilization. These facts may have significant implications for the proton hopping mechanism. The presence of the hydronium ion in the channel also inhibits to some degree the reorientational motions of the channel water molecules. Abstract | PDF (1029 kb) |
| Terahertz Time-Domain Spectroscopy of Amino Acids and Polypeptides Biophysical Journal, Volume 89, Issue 3, 1 September 2005, Pages L22-L24 Kohji Yamamoto, Keisuke Tominaga, Hiroaki Sasakawa, Atsuo Tamura, Hidetoshi Murakami, Hideyuki Ohtake and Nobuhiko Sarukura Abstract Frequency-dependent absorption coefficients and refractive indices of amino acids (glycine and -alanine) and polypeptides (polyglycine and poly--alanine) in the wavenumber region from 7 to 55cm were measured by terahertz time-domain spectroscopy. A vibrational band was observed at 45.5cm for polyglycine, which was assigned as an interchain mode. The reduced absorption cross sections of the amino acids and polypeptides show power-law behavior. The exponents are different between the monomers and polymers, and those of the two polypeptides suggest that the time dependences of the total dipole moments are similar in the timescale of subpico- to picoseconds. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (89 kb) |
| The Formation and Dynamics of Proton Wires in Channel Environments Biophysical Journal, Volume 80, Issue 4, 1 April 2001, Pages 1691-1702 Mark L. Brewer, Udo W. Schmitt and Gregory A. Voth Abstract By virtue of an accurate interaction model, the equilibrium and dynamical properties of an excess proton in aqueous systems are studied, in which the water and excess proton are confined to hydrophobic cylindrical channels. Solvation structures of the excess proton and its mobility along the channel are considered as a function of the channel radius. It is found that when the aqueous proton systems are sufficiently constricted there is a substantial increase in the diffusion of the excess proton charge accompanied by a decrease in the diffusion of water molecules along the channel. Such systems present clear evidence for the possible existence of “proton wires.” Abstract | Full Text | PDF (302 kb) |
Copyright © 1996 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 71, Issue 3, 1172-1178, 1 September 1996
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79321-9
Research Article
D.E. Sagnella, K. Laasonen and M.L. Klein
Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104, USA.
Proton transfer in biological systems is thought to often proceed through hydrogen-bonded chains of water molecules. The ion channel, gramicidin A (gA), houses within its helical structure just such a chain. Using the density functional theory based ab initio molecular dynamics Car-Parrinello method, the structure and dynamics of proton diffusion through a polyglycine analog of the gA ion channel has been investigated. In the channel, a proton, which is initially present as hydronium (H3O+), rapidly forms a strong hydrogen bond with a nearest neighbor water, yielding a transient H5O2+ complex. As in bulk water, strong hydrogen bonding of this complex to a second neighbor solvation shell is required for proton transfer to occur. Within gA, this second neighbor shell included not only a channel water molecule but also a carbonyl of the channel backbone. The present calculations suggest a transport mechanism in which a priori carbonyl solvation is a requirement for proton transfer.