Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Featured researches published by Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik.
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2009
Nina Vlachy; Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Robert Vácha; Didier Touraud; Pavel Jungwirth; Werner Kunz
In this paper, we propose a Hofmeister-like ordering of charged headgroups. To this purpose we review various literature data and complete them with some new experimental and computational results on interactions of ions with alkyl sulfates and carboxylates. We further combine the proposed headgroup ordering with the law of matching water affinities in order to obtain a general description and predictions of ion-headgroup interactions. Examples from colloidal chemistry and from biological systems are provided to illustrate the power of this approach.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Luboš Vrbka; Jiří Vondrášek; Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Robert Vácha; Pavel Jungwirth
For a series of different proteins, including a structural protein, enzyme, inhibitor, protein marker, and a charge-transfer system, we have quantified the higher affinity of Na+ over K+ to the protein surface by means of molecular dynamics simulations and conductivity measurements. Both approaches show that sodium binds at least twice as strongly to the protein surface than potassium does with this effect being present in all proteins under study. Different parts of the protein exterior are responsible to a varying degree for the higher surface affinity of sodium, with the charged carboxylic groups of aspartate and glutamate playing the most important role. Therefore, local ion pairing is the key to the surface preference of sodium over potassium, which is further demonstrated and quantified by simulations of glutamate and aspartate in the form of isolated amino acids as well as short oligopeptides. As a matter of fact, the effect is already present at the level of preferential pairing of the smallest carboxylate anions, formate or acetate, with Na+ versus K+, as shown by molecular dynamics and ab initio quantum chemical calculations. By quantifying and rationalizing the higher preference of sodium over potassium to protein surfaces, the present study opens a way to molecular understanding of many ion-specific (Hofmeister) phenomena involving protein interactions in salt solutions.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Emad F. Aziz; Niklas Ottosson; S. Eisebitt; W. Eberhardt; Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Robert Vácha; Pavel Jungwirth; Bernd Winter
Relative interaction strengths between cations (X = Li (+), Na (+), K (+), NH 4 (+)) and anionic carboxylate groups of acetate and glycine in aqueous solution are determined. These model systems mimic ion pairing of biologically relevant cations with negatively charged groups at protein surfaces. With oxygen 1s X-ray absorption spectroscopy, we can distinguish between spectral contributions from H 2O and carboxylate, which allows us to probe the electronic structure changes of the atomic site of the carboxylate group being closest to the countercation. From the intensity variations of the COO (-) aq O 1s X-ray absorption peak, which quantitatively correlate with the change in the local partial density of states from the carboxylic site, interactions are found to decrease in the sequence Na (+) > Li (+) > K (+) > NH 4 (+). This ordering, as well as the observed bidental nature of the -COO (-) aq and X (+) aq interaction, is supported by combined ab initio and molecular dynamics calculations.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008
Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Petr Slavíček; Lukasz Cwiklik; Dirk Nolting; Bernd Winter; Pavel Jungwirth
Hydration of neutral and cationic imidazole is studied by means of ab initio and molecular dynamics calculations, and by photoelectron spectroscopy of the neutral species in a liquid microjet. The calculations show the importance of long range solvent polarization and of the difference between the structure of water molecules in the first shell around the neutral vs cationic species for determining vertical and adiabatic ionization potentials. The vertical ionization potential of neutral imidazole of 8.06 eV calculated using a nonequilibrium polarizable continuum model agrees well with the value of 8.26 eV obtained experimentally for an aqueous solution at pH 10.6.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Lukasz Cwiklik; Pavel Jungwirth
Surface affinity of hydro-nium was explored using umbrella sampling molecular dynamics simulations with a refined polarizable potential. The polarizable interaction potential of H(3)O(+) was reparametrized against accurate ab initio calculations for geometries including a water molecule approaching the Eigen cation from its oxygen side. Although there is no true hydrogen bonding with H(3)O(+) acting as an acceptor, respecting in the force field the very shallow ab initio minimum corresponding to this interaction leads to a decrease in surface propensity of hydronium compared to previous results. Qualitatively, the mild surface affinity and strong surface orientation of hydronium is, nevertheless, robustly predicted by various computational approaches, as well as by spectroscopic experiments.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Petr Slavíček; Dirk Nolting; Bernd Winter; Pavel Jungwirth
Photoelectron spectroscopy and ab initio calculations employing a nonequilibrium polarizable continuum model were employed for determining the vertical ionization potential of aqueous protonated imidazole. The experimental value of 8.96 eV is in in excellent agreement with calculations, which also perform quantitatively for ionization of aqueous alkali cations as benchmark species. The present results show that protonation of imidazole increases its vertical ionization potential up in water by 0.7 eV, which is significantly larger than the resolution of the experiment or the error of the calculation. This combined experimental and computational approach may open the possibility for quantitatively analyzing the protonation state of histidine, of which imidazole is the titratable side chain group, in aqueous peptides and proteins.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009
Jan Heyda; Jana Pokorná; Luboš Vrbka; Robert Vácha; Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Jan Konvalinka; Pavel Jungwirth; Jiří Vondrášek
The behavior of HIV-1 protease in aqueous NaCl and KCl solutions is investigated by kinetic measurements and molecular dynamics simulations. Experiments show cation-specific effects on the enzymatic activity. The initial velocity of peptide substrate hydrolysis increases with salt concentration more dramatically in potassium than in sodium chloride solutions. Furthermore, significantly higher catalytic efficiencies (k(cat)/K(M)) are observed in the presence of K+ compared to Na+ at comparable salt concentrations. Molecular dynamics simulations provide insight into this ion-specific behavior. Sodium is attracted more strongly than potassium to the protein surface primarily due to stronger interactions with carboxylate side chain groups of aspartates and glutamates. These effects are of particular importance for acidic amino acid residues at or near the active site of the enzyme, including a pair of aspartates at the entrance to the reaction cavity. We infer that the presence of more Na+ than K+ at the active site leads to a lower increase in enzymatic activity with increasing salt concentration in the presence of Na+, likely due to the ability of the alkali cations at the active site to lower the efficiency of substrate binding.
Applied Surface Science | 2003
Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Lukasz Cwiklik; Marek Frankowicz
A new method of simulating temperature programmed desorption (TPD) spectra from porous surface using the Monte Carlo (MC) technique is presented. We introduce so called single pore model (SPM) to describe porous system. Simulations on heterogeneous lattices with particular boundary conditions reflecting a pore geometry are proposed. The technique allows to obtain qualitative and quantitative illustration of influence of porosity on TPD spectra. Examples of simulated TPD curves for model pores are presented.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009
Victoria Buch; J. Paul Devlin; I. Abrrey Monreal; Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Nevin Uras-Aytemiz; Lukasz Cwiklik
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006
Bernd Winter; Manfred Faubel; I. V. Hertel; Christian Pettenkofer; Stephen E. Bradforth; Barbara Jagoda-Cwiklik; Lukasz Cwiklik; Pavel Jungwirth