Microorganisms accumulate molar concentrations of compatible solutes like ectoine to prevent proteins from denaturation. Direct structural or spectroscopic information on the mechanism and about the hydration shell around ectoine are scarce. We combined surface plasmon resonance (SPR), confocal Raman spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulations, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the local hydration shell around ectoine and its influence on the binding of a gene-5-protein (G5P) to a single-stranded DNA (dT25). Due to the very high hygroscopicity of ectoine, it was possible to analyze the highly stable hydration shell by confocal Raman spectroscopy. Corresponding molecular dynamics simulation results revealed a significant change of the water dielectric constant in the presence of a high molar ectoine concentration as compared to pure water. The SPR data showed that the amount of protein bound to DNA decreases in the presence of ectoine, and hence, the protein-DNA dissociation constant increases in a concentration-dependent manner. Concomitantly, the Raman spectra in terms of the amide I region revealed large changes in the protein secondary structure. Our results indicate that ectoine strongly affects the molecular recognition between the protein and the oligonucleotide, which has important consequences for osmotic regulation mechanisms.
We present a new polarizable coarse-grained martini force field for monovalent ions, called refIon, which is developed mainly for the accurate reproduction of electrostatic properties in aqueous electrolyte solutions. The ion model relies on full long-range Coulomb interactions and introduces satellite charges around the central interaction site in order to model molecular polarization effects. All force field parameters are matched to reproduce the mass density and the static dielectric permittivity of aqueous NaCl solutions, such that experimental values are well-reproduced up to moderate salt concentrations of 2 mol/l. In addition, an improved agreement with experimentally measured ionic conductivities is observed. Our model is validated with regard to analytic solutions for the ion distribution around highly charged rod-like polyelectrolytes in combination with atomistic simulations and experimental results concerning structural properties of lipid bilayers in the presence of distinct salt concentrations. Further results regarding the coordination numbers of counterions around dilute poly(styrene sulfonate) and poly(diallyldimethylammonium) polyelectrolyte chains also highlight the applicability of our approach. The introduction of our force field allows us to eliminate heuristic scaling factors, as reported for previous martini ion models in terms of effective salt concentrations, and in consequence provides a better agreement between simulation and experimental results. The presented approach is specifically useful for recent martini attempts that focus on highly charged systems—such as models of DNA, polyelectrolytes or polyelectrolyte complexes—where precise studies of electrostatic effects and charge transport processes are essential.
Large-scale molecular simulations reveal two screening lengths satisfying distinct scaling relations but with unprecedented accuracy no underscreening is detected for concentrated ionic bulk systems.
Five molecular models for trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) to be used in conjunction with compatible models for liquid water are evaluated by comparison of molecular dynamics (MD) simulation results to experimental data as functions of TMAO molality. The experimental data comprise thermodynamic properties (density, apparent molar volume, and partial molar volume at infinite dilution), transport properties (self-diffusion and shear viscosity), structural properties (radial distribution functions and degree of hydrogen bonding), and dielectric properties (dielectric spectra and static permittivity). The thermodynamic and transport properties turned out to be useful in TMAO model discrimination while the influence of the water model and the TMAO-water interaction are effectively probed through the calculation of dielectric spectra.
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