4.6 Article

Stepwise solvation of an amino acid: The appearance of zwitterionic structures

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 111, Issue 31, Pages 7309-7316

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp070211r

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How many solvent molecules are required to solvate an amino acid? This apparently simple question, which relates to the number of solvent molecules necessary to change the amino acid from its gas-phase neutral structure to the zwitterionic solvated structure, remains unanswered to date. Here we present experimental and theoretical (density functional theory: B3LYP/6-31+G**) infrared spectra for tryptophan-water(n) complexes where n = 1-6, which suggest that the zwitterionic structure becomes competitive in energy at the high end of the series. Compelling evidence for a gradual transition to zwitterionic structures comes from tryptophan-methanol complexes up to n = 9. Starting from n = 5, the infrared spectra show increasing intensity in the diagnostic asymmetric COO- stretch and in the weaker NH3+ bending modes as the cluster size increases. Moreover, convergence toward the Fourier transform infrared spectrum of a solution of tryptophan in methanol is clearly observed. For small solvent complexes (n = 1-4), the microsolvation by methanol and water is shown to behave very similarly. A detailed comparison of the experimental and the theoretical spectra allows us to determine both the preferred solvent binding sites on the amino acid and the evolution of conformational structures of tryptophan as the number of attached solvent molecules increases.

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