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Investigation of Noncovalent Interactions in Deprotonated Peptides: Structural and Energetic Competition between Aggregation and Hydration
journal contribution
posted on 2004-03-17, 00:00 authored by Dengfeng Liu, Thomas Wyttenbach, Catherine J. Carpenter, Michael T. BowersNoncovalent peptide−peptide and peptide−water interactions in small model systems were
examined using an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped with a high-pressure drift cell. The results of
these aggregation and hydration experiments were interpreted with the aid of molecular mechanics (MM)
and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The systems investigated include bare deprotonated
monomers and dimers [P1,2−H]- and hydrated deprotonated monomers and dimers [P1,2−H]-·(H2O)n for
the peptides dialanine (P = AA) and diglycine (P = GG). Mass spectra indicated that both peptides AA
and GG form exclusively dimer ions in the electrospray process. Monomeric ions were generated by high-energy injection of the dimers into the drift cell. Temperature-dependent hydration equilibrium experiments
carried out in the drift cell yielded water binding energies ranging from 11.7 (first water molecule) to 7.1
kcal/mol (fourth water) for [AA−H]- and 11.0 to 7.4 kcal/mol for [GG−H]-. The first water molecule adding
to the dimer ions [AA−H]-·(AA) and [GG−H]-·(GG) is bound by 8.4 and 7.5 kcal/mol, respectively. The
hydration mass spectra for the monomers and dimers provide a means to compare the ability of water and
a neutral peptide to solvate a deprotonated peptide [P−H]-. The data indicate that a similar degree of
solvation is achieved by four water molecules, [P−H]-·(H2O)4, or one neutral peptide, [P−H]-·(P).
Temperature-dependent kinetics experiments yielded activation energies for dissociation of the dimers
[AA−H]-·(AA) and [GG−H]-·(GG) of 34.9 and 32.2 kcal/mol, respectively. MM and DFT calculations carried
out for the dialanine system indicated that the dimer binding energy is 24.3 kcal/mol, when the [AA−H]-
and AA products are relaxed to their global minimum structures. However, a value of 38.9 kcal/mol is
obtained if [AA−H]- and AA dissociate but retain the structures of the moieties in the dimer, suggesting
the transition state occurs early in the dissociation process. Similar results were found for the diglycine
dimer.