For more than a century, urea has been commonly used as an agent for denaturing proteins. However, the mechanism behind its denaturing power is still not well understood. Here we show by molecular dynamics simulations that a 7 M aqueous urea solution unfolds a chain of purely hydrophobic groups which otherwise adopts a compact structure in pure water. The unfolding process arises due to a weakening of hydrophobic interactions between the polymer groups. We also show that the attraction between two model hydrophobic plates, and graphene sheets, is reduced when urea is added to the solution. The action of urea is found to be direct, through its preferential binding to the polymer or plates. It is, therefore, acting like a surfactant capable of forming hydrogen bonds with the solvent. The preferential binding and the consequent weakened hydrophobic interactions are driven by enthalpy and are related to the difference in the strength of the attractive dispersion interactions of urea and water with the polymer chain or plate. This relation scales with square root(epsilon(b)), where epsilon(b) is the Lennard Jones (LJ) energy parameter for each group on the chain. Larger values of epsilon(b) increase the preferential binding and result in a larger decrease of the hydrophobic interactions, with a crossover at very weak dispersions. We also show that the indirect mechanism, in which urea acts as a chaotrope, is not a likely cause of urea's action as a denaturant. These findings suggest that, in denaturing proteins, urea (and perhaps other denaturants) forms stronger attractive dispersion interactions with the protein side chains and backbone than does water and, therefore, is able to dissolve the core hydrophobic region.
We report results from molecular dynamics simulations of water under confinement and at ambient conditions that predict a first-order freezing transition from a monolayer of liquid water to a monolayer of ice induced by increasing the distance between the confining parallel plates. Since a slab geometry is incompatible with a tetrahedral arrangement of the sp(3) hybridized oxygen of water, the freezing is coupled to a linear buckling transition. By exploiting the ordered out-of-plane displacement of the molecules in the buckled phase the distortion of the hydrogen bonds is minimized.
We use molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the solvent mediated attraction and drying between two nanoscale hydrophobic surfaces in aqueous salt solutions. We study these effects as a function of the ionic charge density, that is, the ionic charge per unit ionic volume, while keeping the ionic diameter fixed. The attraction is expressed by a negative change in the free energy as the plates are brought together, with enthalpy and entropy changes that both promote aggregation. We find a strong correlation between the strength of the hydrophobic interaction and the degree of preferential binding/exclusion of the ions relative to the surfaces. The results show that amplification of the hydrophobic interaction, a phenomenon analogous to salting-out, is a purely entropic effect and is induced by high-charge-density ions that exhibit preferential exclusion. In contrast, a reduction of the hydrophobic interaction, analogous to salting-in, is induced by low-charge-density ions that exhibit preferential binding, the effect being either entropic or enthalpic. Our findings are relevant to phenomena long studied in solution chemistry, as we demonstrate the significant, yet subtle, effects of electrolytes on hydrophobic aggregation and collapse.
We present results from detailed molecular dynamics simulations revealing a counterintuitive spontaneous physical adsorption of hydroxide ions at a water/hydrophobic interface. The driving force for the migration of the hydroxide ions from the aqueous phase is the preferential orientation of the water molecules in the first two water layers away from the hydrophobic surface. This ordering of the water molecules generates an electrical potential gradient that strongly and favorably interacts with the dipole moment of the hydroxide ion. These findings offer a physical mechanism that explains intriguing experimental reports indicating that the interface between water and a nonionic surface is negatively charged.
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