Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.122, No.43, 9956-9961, 2018
Direct Experimental Characterization of Contributions from Self-Motion of Hydrogen and from Interatomic Motion of Heavy Atoms to Protein Anharmonicity
One fundamental challenge in biophysics is to understand the connection between protein dynamics and its function. Part of the difficulty arises from the fact that proteins often present local atomic motions and collective dynamics on the same time scales, and challenge the experimental identification and quantification of different dynamic modes. Here, by taking lyophilized proteins as the example, we combined deuteration technique and neutron scattering to separate and characterize the self-motion of hydrogen and the collective interatomic motion of heavy atoms (C, O, N) in proteins on the pico-to-nanosecond time scales. We found that hydrogen atoms present an instrument-resolution-dependent onset for anharmonic motions, which can be ascribed to the thermal activation of local side-group motions. However, the protein heavy atoms exhibit an instrument-resolutionindependent anharmonicity around 200 K, which results from unfreezing of the relaxation of the protein structures on the laboratory equilibrium time (100-1000 s), softening of the entire bio-macromolecules.