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New Haven, Conn. Researchers from Yale
University, University of Pittsburgh and University of Georgia have
reported new data on how the fundamental arrangement of water
molecules is affected by the presence of protons. The work appears in
Sciencexpress.
This research is about the surprising flexibility
of water molecules that makes water the medium of choice for
biological systems. The study examines the 50-year-old question of how
many water molecules share a proton, a crucial issue in the
transportation of charge in biological processes.
Models predict a proton to be strongly bound to one
water molecule (Eigen model) or shared between two water molecules (Zundel
model) in a manner that depends on how many water molecules are
available. With 21 molecules, it was thought that the water could form
a "nanocage" structure that holds the Eigen form of the proton in the
center. This report confirms the formation of a dodecahedral
(20-sided) cage, but the data displayed no trace of the Eigen species.
To determine how a precisely determined number of
water molecules interconnect to form these cages, the scientists first
weighed the cluster (after the proton was added), and then monitored
changes in the infrared absorption that occurred upon addition of each
new water molecule.
"The idea was brought to my attention by John Fenn,
Yale Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering and Nobel Prize winner
in Chemistry '02," said Mark Johnson, professor of chemistry and head
of the Yale research team. "Fenn suggested that we might be able to
crack this important problem with current technology. We collaborated
with groups at Pitt and Georgia using experimental techniques
developed in my lab and analyzed the results using Pitt's super
computers."
"Water is tricky because sometimes it is just a
solvent. Like with coffee. All water does for me is hold the caffeine
there, evenly distributed throughout the solution" said Johnson. "For
many other things, particularly in biology, water is actively
participating in chemical change. It is the medium for shuttling
protons. Individual water molecules become part of a network or wire
that guides the flow of protons."
In nature, proton transport is unlike other things
that move through water while retaining their molecular identity.
Protons move much more quickly by trading water partners down the
chain, like the executive desk toy with five steel balls. The proton
that comes out at the end is not the same one that went in. One
example where this mechanism is being currently entertained is in
photosynthesis, where the conversion of light energy to useful energy
by charge separation may be mediated by water molecules. Molecules
once thought to be innocent bystanders may turn out to be the main
players! |