Aneta Panuszko
Gdańsk University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Aneta Panuszko.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009
Aneta Panuszko; Piotr Bruździak; Jan Zielkiewicz; Dariusz Wyrzykowski; Janusz Stangret
The influence of urea and trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) on the structure of water and secondary structure of hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) has been investigated. The hydration of these osmolytes was studied in aqueous solutions by means of FTIR spectra of HDO isotopically diluted in H(2)O. The difference spectra procedure was applied to remove the contribution of bulk water and thus to separate the spectra of solute-affected HDO. The structural-energetic characteristic of these solute-affected water molecules shows that, on average, water affected by TMAO forms stronger H-bonds and is more ordered than pure water. In the case of urea, the H-bonds are very similar to those in pure water. To facilitate the interpretation of the obtained spectral results, calorimetric measurements, DFT calculations, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of aqueous osmolyte clusters were performed. All of these results confirmed that the interactions of TMAO with water molecules are much stronger than those of urea with water. Additional ATR FTIR measurements were performed to characterize the influence of the examined osmolytes on the secondary structure of HEW lysozyme. The type of interactions (direct or indirect) was determined, based on the second derivatives of ATR protein spectra record during an increase in the osmolyte concentration. The changes in the amide I band shape caused by urea or TMAO were found to correlate quite well with changes in the water structure around these osmolytes.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Aneta Panuszko; Emilia Gojło; Jan Zielkiewicz; Maciej Śmiechowski; and Joanna Krakowiak; Janusz Stangret
The hydration of formamide (F), N-methylformamide (NMF), N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF), acetamide (A), N-methylacetamide (NMA), and N,N-dimethylacetamide (DMA) has been studied in aqueous solutions by means of FTIR spectra of HDO isotopically diluted in H2O. The difference spectra procedure has been applied to remove the contribution of bulk water and thus to separate the spectra of solute-affected HDO. To facilitate the interpretation of obtained spectral results, DFT calculations of aqueous amide clusters were performed. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation for the cis and trans forms of NMA was also carried out for the SPC model of water. Infrared spectra reveal that only two to three water molecules from the surrounding of the amides are statistically affected, from among ca. 30 molecules present in the first hydration sphere. The structural-energetic characteristic of these solute-affected water molecules differs only slightly from that in the bulk and corresponds to the clathrate-like hydrogen-bonded cage typical for hydrophobic hydration, with the possible exception of F. MD simulations confirm such organization of water molecules in the first hydration sphere of NMA and indicate a practical lack of orientation and energetic effects beyond this sphere. The geometry of hydrogen-bonded water molecules in the first hydration sphere is very similar to that in the bulk phase, but MD simulations have affirmed subtle differences recognized by the spectral method and enabled their understanding. The spectral data and simulations results are highly compatible. In the case of F, NMF, and A, there is a visible spectral effect of water interactions with N-H groups, which have destabilizing influence on the amides hydration shell. There is no spectral sign of such interaction for NMA as the solute. The energetic stability of water H-bonds in the amide hydration sphere and in the bulk fulfills the order: NMA > DMA > A > NMF > bulk > DMF > F. Microscopic parameters of water organization around the amides obtained from the spectra, which have been used in the hydration model based on volumetric data, confirm the more hydrophobic character of the first three amides in this sequence. The increased stability of the hydration sphere of NMA relative to DMA and of NMF relative to DMF seems to have its origin in different geometries, and so the stability, of water cages containing the amides.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009
Emilia Gojło; Maciej Smiechowski; Aneta Panuszko; Janusz Stangret
Hydration of carboxylate ions was studied in aqueous solutions of sodium salts by means of FTIR spectroscopy using the HDO molecule as a probe. The quantitative version of the difference spectra method has been applied to determine the solute-affected water spectra. They display two-component bands of affected HDO at ca. 2550 and 2420 cm(-1). These bands are attributed to the -COO(-) group of the R-COO(-) ion (R = H, CH(3), C(2)H(5)), because water molecules surrounding the substituent R behave roughly as molecules in the bulk phase. For the studied carboxylates the net water structure making effect is observed, which increases with electron-donor ability of R, by means of changing the relative intensity of solute-affected HDO component bands. The observed splitting of the carboxylate-ion-affected HDO band is unique for these anions. The experimental results were confronted with DFT-calculated structures of small gas-phase and polarizable continuum model (PCM) solvated aqueous clusters to establish the structural and energetic states of carboxylate ions hydrates. This was achieved by comparison of the calculated optimal geometries with the interatomic distances derived from HDO band positions. Different possibilities have been considered to explain the peculiar spectral results. The plausible explanation assumes symmetry breaking of the carboxylate ion induced by interaction with water solvent: C-O bond lengths of RCOO(-) and electric charge localization become unequal. It is demonstrated by nonequivalent interaction of oxygen atoms of the RCOO(-) anion with water molecules. Taking into account only the energetic effect, the phenomenon is explained by the anticooperative H-bond formation of the carboxylate group with water molecules, which increases with the electron-donor ability of the substituent R. In this interaction two water molecules play an important part, as appears from the calculated clusters. They interact with oxygen atoms of the RCOO(-) ion, forming a cooperative system, within which solvent molecules are nonequivalent with respect to H-bond formation with both proton-accepting sites of the solute. This additionally enhances solvent-induced symmetry breaking of carboxylate anion. Strongly hydrogen-bonded solvent is more effective in inducing symmetry breaking; thus, increasing the temperature decreases the splitting of the carboxylate-ion-affected water, as experimentally observed.
Amino Acids | 2015
Aneta Panuszko; Beata Adamczak; Jacek Czub; Emilia Gojło; Janusz Stangret
The hydration of selected amino acids, alanine, glycine, proline, valine, isoleucine and phenylalanine, has been studied in aqueous solutions by means of FTIR spectra of HDO isotopically diluted in H2O. The difference spectra procedure and the chemometric method have been applied to remove the contribution of bulk water and thus to separate the spectra of solute-affected HDO. To support interpretation of obtained spectral results, molecular dynamics simulations of amino acids were performed. The structural-energetic characteristic of these solute-affected water molecules shows that, on average, water affected by amino acids forms stronger and shorter H-bonds than those in pure water. Differences in the influence of amino acids on water structure have been noticed. The effect of the hydrophobic side chain of an amino acid on the solvent interactions seems to be enhanced because of the specific cooperative coupling of water strong H-bond chain, connecting the carboxyl and amino groups, with the clathrate-like H-bond network surrounding the hydrocarbon side chain. The parameter derived from the spectral data, which corresponds to the contributions of the population of weak hydrogen bonds of water molecules which have been substituted by the stronger ones in the hydration sphere of amino acids, correlated well with the amino acid hydrophobicity indexes.
Amino Acids | 2018
Piotr Bruździak; Aneta Panuszko; Emilia Kaczkowska; B. Piotrowski; A. Daghir; S. Demkowicz; Janusz Stangret
Abstract The enhancing effect on the water structure has been confirmed for most of the osmolytes exhibiting both stabilizing and destabilizing properties in regard to proteins. The presented work concerns osmolytes, which should be classified as “structure breaking” solutes: taurine and N,N,N-trimethyltaurine (TMT). Here, we combine FTIR spectroscopy, DSC calorimetry and DFT calculations to gain an insight into the interactions between osmolytes and two proteins: lysozyme and ubiquitin. Despite high structural similarity, both osmolytes exert different influence on protein stability: taurine is a stabilizer, TMT is a denaturant. We show also that taurine amino group interacts directly with the side chains of proteins, whereas TMT does not interact with proteins at all. Although two solutes weaken on average the structure of the surrounding water, their hydration spheres are different. Taurine is surrounded by two populations of water molecules: bonded with weak H-bonds around sulfonate group, and strongly bonded around amino group. The strong hydrogen-bonded network of water molecules around the amino group of taurine further improves properties of enhanced protein hydration sphere and stabilizes the native protein form. Direct interactions of this group with surface side chains provide a proper orientation of taurine and prevents the
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013
Piotr Bruździak; Aneta Panuszko; Janusz Stangret
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011
Aneta Panuszko; Maciej Śmiechowski; Janusz Stangret
{\text{SO}}_{3}^{ - }
The Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics | 2013
Joanna Krakowiak; Jarosław Wawer; Aneta Panuszko
The Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics | 2013
Joanna Krakowiak; Jarosław Wawer; Aneta Panuszko
SO3- group from negative influence. The weakened
Vibrational Spectroscopy | 2010
Piotr Bruździak; Aneta Panuszko; Janusz Stangret