We probe the effects of solute length scale, attractions, and hydrostatic pressure on hydrophobic hydration shells using extensive molecular simulations. The hydration shell compressibility and water fluctuations both display a nonmonotonic dependence on solute size, with a minimum near molecular solutes and enhanced fluctuations for larger ones. These results and calculations on proteins suggest that the hydration shells of unfolded proteins are more compressible than of folded ones contributing to pressure denaturation. More importantly, the nonmonotonicity implies a solute curvature-dependent pressure sensitivity for interactions between hydrophobic solutes.
Reference
Sarupria S and Garde S (). "Quantifying Water Density Fluctuations and Compressibility of Hydration Shells of Hydrophobic Solutes and Proteins
," Phys. Rev. Lett., 103(3), 37803
Bibtex
@article{sarupria2009quantifying, title = {Quantifying water density fluctuations and compressibility of hydration shells of hydrophobic solutes and proteins}, author = {Sarupria, Sapna and Garde, Shekhar}, journal = {Physical review letters}, volume = {103}, number = {3}, pages = {037803}, year = {2009}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.037803} }