Contrasting Effects of Ionic Liquids of Varying Degree of Hydrophilicity on the Conformational and Interfacial Properties of a Globular Protein.
Krishna Prasad GhantaSouvik MondalSandip MondalSanjoy BandyopadhyayPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2021)
Ionic liquids (ILs), depending on their cation-anion combinations, are known to influence the conformational properties and activities of proteins in a nonuniform manner. To obtain microscopic understanding of such influence, it is important to characterize protein-IL interactions and explore the modified solvation environment around the protein. In this work, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the globular protein α-lactalbumin have been carried out in aqueous IL solutions containing 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium cations (BMIM+) in combination with a series of anions with varying degree of hydrophilicity, namely, hexafluorophosphate (PF6-), ethyl sulfate (ETS-), acetate (OAc-), chloride (Cl-), dicyanamide (DCA-), and nitrate (NO3-) . The calculations revealed that ILs with hydrophobic and hydrophilic anions have contrasting influence on conformational flexibility of the protein. It is further observed that the BMIM+ cations exhibit site-specific orientations at the interface depending on the hydrophilicity of the anion component. Most importantly, the results demonstrated enhanced propensity of hydrophilic ILs to replace relatively weaker protein-water hydrogen bonds by stronger protein-IL hydrogen bonds at the protein surface as compared to the hydrophobic ILs. Such breaking of protein-water hydrogen bonds at a greater extent leads to greater loss of water hydrating the protein in the presence of hydrophilic ILs, thereby reducing the protein's stability.