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Studying Water Hydrogen-Bonding Network near the Lipid Multibilayer with Multiple IR Probes

Authors
Kundu, AchintyaVerma, Pramod KumarHa, Jeong-HyonCho, Minhaeng
Issue Date
23-2월-2017
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Citation
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, v.121, no.7, pp.1435 - 1441
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume
121
Number
7
Start Page
1435
End Page
1441
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/84409
DOI
10.1021/acs.jpca.6b12152
ISSN
1089-5639
Abstract
A critical difference between living and nonliving is the existence of cell membranes, and hydration of membrane surface is a prerequisite for structural stability and various functions such as absorption/desorption of drugs, proteins, and ions. Therefore, a molecular level understanding of water structure and dynamics near the membrane is important to perceive the role of water in such a biologically relevant environment. In our recent paper [J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2016, 7, 741] on the IR pump probe study of the OD stretch mode of HDO near lipid multibilayers, we have observed two different vibrational lifetime components of OD stretch mode in the phospholipid multibilayer systems. The faster component (0.6 ps) is associated with OD groups interacting with the phosphate moiety of the lipid, while the slower component (1.9 ps) is due to choline-associated water molecules that are close to bulklike water. Here, we additionally use hydrazoic acid (HN3) as another IR probe of which frequency is highly sensitive to its local H-bonding water density. Interestingly, we found that the vibrational lifetime of the asymmetric azido stretch mode of HN3 in the lipid multibilayer system is similar to that in neat water, whereas its orientational relaxation is a bit slower than that in bulk water. This indicates that due to the tight packing of lipid molecules, particularly the head parts, in the gel phase, HN3 molecules mostly stay near the choline group of lipid and interact with water molecules in the vicinity of choline groups. This suggests that membrane surface-adsorbed molecules such as hydrophilic drug molecules may interact with choline-associated water molecules, when the membrane is in the gel phase, instead of phosphate-associated water molecules.
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