Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.122, No.22, 5897-5907, 2018
Influence of Cholesterol on the Dynamics of Hydration in Phospholipid Bilayers
We investigate the dynamics of interfacial waters in dipalmitoylphosphati- DPPC dylcholine (DPPC) bilayers upon the addition of cholesterol, by molecular dynamics simulations. Our data reveal that the inclusion of cholesterol modifies the membrane aqueous interfacial dynamics: waters diffuse faster, their rotational decay time is shorter, and the DPPC/water hydrogen bond dynamics relaxes faster than in the pure DPPC membrane. The observed acceleration of the translational water dynamics agrees with recent experimental results, in which, by means of NMR techniques, an increment of the surface water diffusivity is measured upon the addition of cholesterol. A microscopic analysis of the lipid/water hydrogen bond network at the interfacial region suggests that the mechanism underlying the observed water mobility enhancement is given by the rupture of a fraction of interlipid water bridge hydrogen bonds connecting two different DPPC molecules, concomitant to the formation of new lipid/solvent bonds, whose dynamics is faster than that of the former. The consideration of a simple two-state model for the decay of the hydrogen bond correlation function yielded excellent results, obtaining two well -separated characteristic time scales: a slow one (similar to 250 ps) associated with bonds linking two DPPC molecules, and a fast one (similar to 15 ps), related to DPPC/solvent bonds.