Issue 28, 2021

Water–biomolecule clusters studied by photoemission spectroscopy and multilevel atomistic simulations: hydration or solvation?

Abstract

The properties of mixed water–uracil nanoaggregates have been probed by core electron–photoemission measurements to investigate supramolecular assembly in the gas phase driven by weak interactions. The interpretation of the measurements has been assisted by multilevel atomistic simulations, based on semi-empirical tight-binding and DFT-based methods. Our protocol established a positive-feedback loop between experimental and computational techniques, which has enabled a sound and detailed atomistic description of such complex heterogeneous molecular aggregates. Among biomolecules, uracil offers interesting and generalized skeletal features; its structure encompasses an alternation of hydrophilic H-bond donor and acceptor sites and hydrophobic moieties, typical in biomolecular systems, that induces a supramolecular core–shell-like organization of the mixed clusters with a water core and an uracil shell. This structure is far from typical models of both solid-state hydration, with water molecules in defined positions, or liquid solvation, where disconnected uracil molecules are completely surrounded by water.

Graphical abstract: Water–biomolecule clusters studied by photoemission spectroscopy and multilevel atomistic simulations: hydration or solvation?

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 May 2021
Accepted
25 Jun 2021
First published
25 Jun 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021,23, 15049-15058

Water–biomolecule clusters studied by photoemission spectroscopy and multilevel atomistic simulations: hydration or solvation?

G. Mattioli, L. Avaldi, P. Bolognesi, J. D. Bozek, M. C. Castrovilli, J. Chiarinelli, A. Domaracka, S. Indrajith, S. Maclot, A. R. Milosavljević, C. Nicolafrancesco and P. Rousseau, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021, 23, 15049 DOI: 10.1039/D1CP02031E

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