Mikael Lund
Professor
Ion pairing as a possible clue for discriminating between sodium and potassium in biological and other complex environments
Author
Summary, in English
For a series of biologically relevant anions, we present free energy changes upon replacing potassium with sodium in a contact ion pair. Calculations performed using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations and ab initio methods demonstrate the ordering of anions in a Hofmeister series. Small anionic groups such as carboxylates preferentially pair with sodium, while intermediate cases such as chloride or monovalent phosphate exhibit almost no specificity, and large anions (e.g., methylsulfonate) prefer potassium over sodium. These results can rationalize different behavior of Na+ versus K - at the surface of hydrated proteins, DNA, and reversed micelles.
Publishing year
2007-12-27
Language
English
Pages
14077-14079
Publication/Series
Journal of Physical Chemistry B
Volume
111
Issue
51
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
Topic
- Theoretical Chemistry (including Computational Chemistry)
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1520-6106