Abstract

Hydration is essential for the structural and functional integrity of globular proteins. How much hydration water is required for that integrity? A number of techniques such as X-ray diffraction, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, calorimety, infrared spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations indicate that the hydration level is 0.3–0.5 g of water per gram of protein for medium sized proteins. Hydrodynamic properties, when accounted for by modeling proteins as ellipsoids, appear to give a wide range of hydration levels. In this paper we describe an alternative numerical technique for hydrodynamic calculations that takes account of the detailed protein structures. This is made possible by relating hydrodynamic properties (translational and rotational diffusion constants and intrinsic viscosity) to electrostatic properties (capacitance and polarizability). We show that the use of detailed protein structures in predicting hydrodynamic properties leads to hydration levels in agreement with other techniques. A unified picture of protein hydration emerges. There are preferred hydration sites around a protein surface. These sites are occupied nearly all the time, but by different water molecules at different times. Thus, though a given water molecule may have a very short residence time (∼100–500 ps from NMR spectroscopy and MD simulations) in a particular site, the site appears fully occupied in experiments in which time-averaged properties are measured.

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