M. Prevost et I. Ortmans, Interactions of the N-terminal domain of apolipoprotein E with a mimetic water-lipid surface: A molecular dynamics study, J PHYS CH B, 105(29), 2001, pp. 7080-7086
Apolipoprotein E, a protein that is subject to structural changes at a wate
r/lipid interface, is studied by molecular dynamics simulations performed i
n water and at a water/organic-phase interface. The protein backbone atoms
get significantly more hydrated in the interfacial system than in the water
simulation and undergo larger positional fluctuations. Larger fluctuations
and hydration concur to be more manifest in the interfacial region of the
aqueous phase. In this interfacial region, water is more structured and mak
es, relative to its number of neighbors, more hydrogen bonds than water in
the bulk, a picture that has been previously inferred from molecular dynami
cs simulations of several water-organic liquid interfaces. We propose that
the higher degree of protein hydration observed in the interfacial simulati
on arises from the structural behavior of interfacial water, which needs to
make more H bonds and sees the protein as an additional partner. Our resul
ts are in agreement with spectroscopic data obtained for another apolipopro
tein structurally similar to apolipoprotein E that show an increase in the
protein hydration in the presence of a water/lipid interface and suggest th
at hydration is a factor helping the barrier crossing from the structure in
aqueous solution to a partially folded conformation prone to bind to the l
ipids.