Thermodynamics and Intermolecular Interactions during
the Insertion of Anionic Naproxen into Model Cell Membranes
Posted on 2021-09-07 - 21:29
The
insertion process of Naproxen into model dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine
(DMPC) membranes is studied by resorting to state-of-the-art classical
and quantum mechanical atomistic computational approaches. Molecular
dynamics simulations indicate that anionic Naproxen finds an equilibrium
position right at the polar/nonpolar interphase when the process takes
place in aqueous environments. With respect to the reference aqueous
phase, the insertion process faces a small energy barrier of ≈5
kJ mol–1 and yields a net stabilization of also
≈5 kJ mol–1. Entropy changes along the insertion
path, mainly due to a growing number of realizable microstates because
of structural reorganization, are the main factors driving the insertion.
An attractive fluxional wall of noncovalent interactions is characterized
by all-quantum descriptors of chemical bonding (natural bond orbitals,
quantum theory of atoms in molecules, noncovalent interaction, density
differences, and natural charges). This attractive wall originates
in the accumulation of tiny transfers of electron densities to the
interstitial region between the fragments from a multitude of individual
intermolecular contacts stabilizing the tertiary drug/water/membrane
system.
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Rojas-Valencia, Natalia; Gómez, Sara; Núñez-Zarur, Francisco; Cappelli, Chiara; Hadad, Cacier; Restrepo, Albeiro (2021). Thermodynamics and Intermolecular Interactions during
the Insertion of Anionic Naproxen into Model Cell Membranes. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c06766