Swinburne
Browse

Intramolecular interactions of L-phenylalanine revealed by inner shell chemical shift

Download (2.28 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-13, 03:09 authored by Aravindhan Ganesan, Feng WangFeng Wang
Intramolecular interactions of the functional groups, carboxylic acid, amino, and phenyl in L-phenylalanine have been revealed through inner shell chemical shift. The chemical shift and electronic structures are studied using its derivatives, 2-phenethylamine (PEA) and 3-phenylpropionic acid (PPA), through substitutions of the functional groups on the chiral carbon C-alpha, i.e., carboxylic acid (-COOH) and amino (-NH2) groups. Inner shell ionization spectra of L-phenylalanine are simulated using density functional theory based B3LYP/TZVP and LB94/et-pVQZ models, which achieve excellent agreement with the most recently available synchrotron sourced x-ray photoemission spectroscopy of L-phenylalanine (Elettra, Italy). The present study reveals insight into behavior of the peptide bond (CO-NH) through chemical shift of the C-1-C-alpha-C-beta(-C-gamma) chain and intramolecular interactions with phenyl. It is found that the chemical shift of the carbonyl C-1(=O) site exhibits an apparently redshift (smaller energy) when interacting with the phenyl aromatic group. Removal of the amino group (-NH2) from L-phenylalanine (which forms PPA) brings this energy on C-1 close to that in L-alanine (delta<0.01 eV). Chemical environment of C-alpha and C-beta exhibits more significant differences in L-alanine than in the aromatic species, indicating that the phenyl group indeed affects the peptide bond in the amino acid fragment. No direct evidences are found that the carbonyl acid and amino group interact with the phenyl ring through conventional hydrogen bonds.

Funding

National Computational Infrastructure

History

Available versions

PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0021-9606

Journal title

Journal of Chemical Physics

Volume

131

Issue

4

Article number

article no. 044321

Pagination

044321-

Publisher

American Institute of Physics

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2009 American Institute of Physics. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Notes

This article also features in the July 2009 issue of JCP: BioChemical Physics, which selects biophysical content from the Journal of Chemical Physics and compiles it into monthly issues. For the feature article, see: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/64666.

Language

eng

Usage metrics

    Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC