Hydrophobic Collapse in N -Methylacetamide-Water Mixtures

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Abstract

Aqueous N-methylacetamide solutions were investigated by polarization-resolved pump-probe and 2D infrared spectroscopy (2D IR), using the amide I mode as a reporter. The 2D IR results are compared with molecular dynamics simulations and spectral calculations to gain insight into the molecular structures in the mixture. N-Methylacetamide and water molecules tend to form clusters with "frozen" amide I dynamics. This is driven by a hydrophobic collapse as the methyl groups of the N-methylacetamide molecules cluster in the presence of water. Since the studied system can be considered as a simplified model for the backbone of proteins, the present study forms a convenient basis for understanding the structural and vibrational dynamics in proteins. It is particularly interesting to find out that a hydrophobic collapse as the one driving protein folding is observed in such a simple system.

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Salamatova, E., Cunha, A. V., Bloem, R., Roeters, S. J., Woutersen, S., Jansen, T. L. C., & Pshenichnikov, M. S. (2018). Hydrophobic Collapse in N -Methylacetamide-Water Mixtures. Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 122(9), 2468–2478. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.8b00276

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