Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.135, No.9, 3592-3598, 2013
Chiral Sum Frequency Generation for In Situ Probing Proton Exchange in Antiparallel beta-Sheets at Interfaces
Studying hydrogen/deuterium (HID) exchange in proteins can provide valuable insight on protein structure and dynamics. Several techniques are available for probing H/D exchange in the bulk solution, including NMR, mass spectroscopy, and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. However, probing HID exchange at interfaces is challenging because it requires surface-selective methods. Here, we introduce the combination of in situ chiral sum frequency generation (cSFG) spectroscopy and ab initio simulations of cSFG spectra as a powerful methodology to probe the dynamics of HID exchange at interfaces. This method is applied to characterize HID exchange in the antiparallel beta-sheet peptide LK7 beta. We report here for the first time that the rate of D-to-H exchange is about I order of magnitude faster than H-to-D exchange in the antiparallel structure at the air/water interface, which is consistent with the existing knowledge that 0 H/D dissociation in water is the rate-limiting step, and breaking the O-D bond is slower than breaking the O-H bond. The reported analysis also provides fundamental understanding of several vibrational modes and their couplings in peptide backbones that have been difficult to characterize by conventional methods, including Fermi resonances of various combinations of peptide vibrational modes such as amide I and amide II, C-N stretch, and N-H/N-D bending. These results demonstrate cSFG as a sensitive technique for probing the kinetics of HID exchange in proteins at interfaces, with high signal-to-noise N-H/N-D stretch bands that are free of background from the water O-H/O-D stretch.