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Intermolecular Protein-Water Coupling Impedes the Coupling Between the Amide A and Amide I Mode in Interfacial Proteins.

The coupling between different vibrational modes in proteins is essential for chemical dynamics and biological functions and is linked to the propagation of conformational changes and pathways of allosteric communication. However, little is known about the influence of intermolecular protein-H2 O coupling on the vibrational coupling between amide A (NH) and amide I (C═O) bands. Here, we investigate the NH/CO coupling strength in various peptides with different secondary structures at the lipid cell membrane/H2 O interface using femtosecond time-resolved sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy (SFG-VS) in which a femtosecond infrared pump is used to excite the amide A band, and SFG-VS is used to probe transient spectral evolution in the amide A and amide I bands. Our results reveal that the NH/CO coupling strength strongly depends on the bandwidth of the amide I mode and the coupling of proteins with water molecules. A large extent of protein-water coupling significantly reduces the delocalization of the amide I mode along the peptide chain and impedes the NH/CO coupling strength. A large NH/CO coupling strength is found to show a strong correlation with the high energy transfer rate found in the light-harvesting proteins of green sulfur bacteria, which may understand the mechanism of energy transfer through a molecular system and assist in controlling vibrational energy transfer by engineering the molecular structures to achieve high energy transfer efficiency.

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