posted on 2014-11-11, 00:00authored byAnas M. Sultan, Zak E. Hughes, Tiffany R. Walsh
Despite the extensive utilization
of biomolecule–titania
interfaces, biomolecular recognition and interactions at the aqueous
titania interface remain far from being fully understood. Here, atomistic
molecular dynamics simulations, in partnership with metadynamics,
are used to calculate the free energy of adsorption of different amino
acid side chain analogues at the negatively-charged aqueous rutile
TiO2 (110) interface, under conditions corresponding with
neutral pH. Our calculations predict that charged amino acid analogues
have a relatively high affinity to the titania surface, with the arginine
analogue predicted to be the strongest binder. Interactions between
uncharged amino acid analogues and titania are found to be repulsive
or weak at best. All of the residues that bound to the negatively-charged
interface show a relatively stronger adsorption compared with the
charge-neutral interface, including the negatively-charged analogue.
Of the analogues that are found to bind to the titania surface, the
rank ordering of the binding affinities is predicted to be “arginine”
> “lysine” ≈ aspartic acid > “serine”.
This is the same ordering as was found previously for the charge-neutral
aqueous titania interface. Our results show very good agreement with
available experimental data and can provide a baseline for the interpretation
of peptide–TiO2 adsorption data.