Water is essential to life and its translational motion in living systems mediates various biological processes, including transportation of function-required ingredients and facilitating the interaction between biomacromolecules. By combining neutron scattering and isotopic labeling, the present work characterizes translational motion of water on a biomolecular surface, in a range of systems: a hydrated protein powder, a concentrated protein solution, and in living Escherichia coli (E. coli) cells. Anomalous sub-diffusion of water is observed in all samples, which is alleviated upon increasing the water content. Complementary molecular dynamics simulations and coarse-grained numerical modeling demonstrated that the sub-diffusive behavior results from the heterogeneous distribution of microscopic translational mobility of interfacial water. Moreover, by comparing the experimental results measured on E. coli cells with those from a concentrated protein solution with the same amount of water, we show that water in the two samples has a similar average mobility, however the underlying distribution of motion is more heterogeneous in the living cell.
CITATION STYLE
Li, R., Liu, Z., Li, L., Huang, J., Yamada, T., Sakai, V. G., … Hong, L. (2020). Anomalous sub-diffusion of water in biosystems: From hydrated protein powders to concentrated protein solution to living cells. Structural Dynamics, 7(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/4.0000036
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