4.6 Article

Aqueous TMAO solution under high hydrostatic pressure

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 19, Pages 11355-11365

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp00703c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Forschergruppe (Exploring the Dynamical Landscape of Biomolecular Systems by Pressure Perturbation) [FOR 1979]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC 2033 - 390677874]

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Research shows that under high hydrostatic pressure, TMAO tends to form TMAO·(H2O)4 complexes compared to ambient conditions, accompanied by a weakening of the local hydrogen bond network. With increasing pressure, hydrophobic hydration significantly increases, but levels off at higher pressures.
Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) is a well known osmolyte in nature, which is used by deep sea fish to stabilize proteins against High Hydrostatic Pressure (HHP). We present a combined ab initio molecular dynamics, force field molecular dynamics, and THz absorption study of TMAO in water up to 12 kbar to decipher its solvation properties upon extreme compression. On the hydrophilic oxygen side of TMAO, AIMD simulations at 1 bar and 10 kbar predict a change of the coordination number from a dominating TMAO center dot(H2O)(3) complex at ambient conditions towards an increased population of a TMAO center dot(H2O)(4) complex at HHP conditions. This increase of the TMAO-oxygen coordination number goes in line with a weakening of the local hydrogen bond network, spectroscopic shifts and intensity changes of the corresponding intermolecular THz bands. Using a pressure-dependent HHP force field, FFMD simulations predict a significant increase of hydrophobic hydration from 1 bar up to 4-5 kbar, which levels off at higher pressures up to 10 kbar. THz spectroscopic data reveal two important pressure regimes with spectroscopic inflection points of the dominant intermolecular modes: The first regime (1.5-2 kbar) is barely recognizable in the simulation data. However, it relates well with the observation that the apparent molar volume of solvated TMAO is nearly constant in the biologically relevant pressure range up to 1 kbar as found in the deepest habitats on Earth in the ocean. The second inflection point around 4-5 kbar is related to the amount of hydrophobic hydration as predicted by the FFMD simulations. In particular, the blueshift of the intramolecular CNC bending mode of TMAO at about 390 cm(-1) is the spectroscopic signature of increasingly pronounced pressure-induced changes in the solvation shell of TMAO. Thus, the CNC bend can serve as local pressure sensor in the multi-kbar pressure regime.

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