Solvation shell

The first solvation shell of a sodium ion dissolved in water

A solvation shell is the solvent interface of any chemical compound or biomolecule that constitutes the solute. When the solvent is water it is often referred to as a hydration shell or hydration sphere.

A classic example is when water molecules arrange around a metal ion. For example, if the latter were a cation, the electronegative oxygen atom of the water molecule would be attracted electrostatically to the positive charge on the metal ion. The result is a solvation shell of water molecules that surround the ion. This shell can be several molecules thick, dependent upon the charge of the ion, its distribution and spatial dimensions.

Hydration shells of proteins

The hydration shell (also sometimes called hydration layer) that forms around proteins is of particular importance in biochemistry. This interaction of the protein surface with the surrounding water is often referred to as protein hydration and is fundamental to the activity of the protein.[1] The hydration layer around a protein has been found to have dynamics distinct from the bulk water to a distance of 1 nm. The duration of contact of a specific water molecule with the protein surface may be in the subnanosecond range while molecular dynamics simulations suggest the time water spends in the hydration shell before mixing with the outside bulk water could be in the femtosecond to picosecond range.[1]

With other solvents and solutes, varying steric and kinetic factors can also affect the solvation shell.

Dehydrons

A dehydron is a hydrogen bond in a protein that is incompletely shielded from water attack, with a propensity to promote its own dehydration, a process both energetically and thermodynamically favored.[2][3] They result from an incomplete clustering of side-chain nonpolar groups that "wrap" the polar pair within the protein structure. Dehydrons promote the removal of surrounding water through protein associations or ligand binding.[2] Dehydrons can be identified by calculating the reversible work per unit area required to span the aqueous interface of a soluble protein, or the "epistructural tension" of the interface.[4][5]:217–33 Once identified, dehydrons can be used in drug discovery, both to identify new compounds and to optimize existing compounds; chemicals can be designed to "wrap" or shield dehydrons from water attack upon association with the target.[2][5]:1–15[6][7]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Zhang, L.; Wang, L.; Kao, Y. -T.; Qiu, W.; Yang, Y.; Okobiah, O.; Zhong, D. (2007). "Mapping hydration dynamics around a protein surface". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (47): 18461–18466. Bibcode:2007PNAS..10418461Z. doi:10.1073/pnas.0707647104. PMC 2141799Freely accessible. PMID 18003912.
  2. 1 2 3 Fernández, A; Crespo, A (Nov 2008). "Protein wrapping: a molecular marker for association, aggregation and drug design". Chem Soc Rev. 37 (11): 2373–82. doi:10.1039/b804150b. PMID 18949110.
  3. Ball, P (Jan 2008). "Water as an active constituent in cell biology". Chem Rev. 108 (1): 74–108. doi:10.1021/cr068037a. PMID 18095715.
  4. Fernández, A (May 2012). "Epistructural tension promotes protein associations". Phys Rev Lett. 108 (18): 188102. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.108.188102. PMID 22681121. Lay summary: Proteins hook up where water allows
  5. 1 2 Ariel Fernandez. Transformative Concepts for Drug Design: Target Wrapping: Target Wrapping. Springer Science & Business Media, 2010. ISBN 978-3-642-11791-6
  6. Demetri, GD (Dec 2007). "Structural reengineering of imatinib to decrease cardiac risk in cancer therapy". J Clin Invest. 117 (12): 3650–3. doi:10.1172/JCI34252. PMC 2096446Freely accessible. PMID 18060025.
  7. Sarah Crunkhorn for Nature Reviews Drug Discovery. February 2008. Research Highlight: Anticancer drugs: Redesigning kinase inhibitors.

External links

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