Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.138, No.16, 5226-5229, 2016
Ultrafast Reorientational Dynamics of Leucine at the Air-Water Interface
Ultrafast dynamics of protein side chains are involved in important biological processes such as ligand binding, protein folding, and hydration. In addition, the dynamics of a side chain can report on local environments within proteins. While protein side chain dynamics have been probed for proteins in solution with nuclear magnetic resonance and infrared methods for decades, information about side chain dynamics at interfaces is lacking. At the same time, the dynamics and motions of side chains can be particularly important for interfacial binding and protein-driven surface manipulation. We here demonstrate that ultrafast reorientation dynamics of leucine amino acids at interfaces can be recorded in situ and in real time using polarization- and time-resolved pump probe sum frequency generation (SFG). Combined with molecular dynamics simulations, time-resolved SFG was used to probe the reorientation of the isopropyl methyl groups of L-leucine at the air water interface. The data show that the methyl units reorient diffusively at an in plane rate of D-phi = 0.07 rad(2)/ps and an out of plane rate of D-theta = 0.05 rad(2)/ps.