Hydrophobic hydration driven self-assembly of Curcumin in water: Similarities to nucleation and growth under large metastability, and an analysis of water dynamics at heterogeneous surfaces
Milan Kumar Hazra, Susmita Roy, Biman Bagchi

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how curcumin molecules aggregate in water, revealing structural patterns, metastable intermediates, and water dynamics similar to biological systems, with implications for its bioavailability.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the aggregation pathways, structural arrangements, and water interactions of curcumin in aqueous environments, highlighting similarities to protein nucleation processes.
Findings
Curcumin forms aggregates with parallel and anti-parallel phenyl ring orientations.
Aggregation involves metastable intermediates resembling nucleation and growth.
Water near the cluster surface shows slowed dynamics and distorted tetrahedral geometry.
Abstract
As the beneficial effects of curcumin have often been reported to be limited to its small concentrations, we have undertaken a study to find the aggregation properties of curcumin in water by varying the number of monomers. Our molecular dynamics simulation results show that the equilibrated structure is always an aggregated state with remarkable structural rearrangements as we vary the number of curcumin monomers from 4 to 16 monomers. We find that curcumin monomers form clusters in a very definite pattern where they tend to aggregate both in parallel and anti-parallel orientation of the phenyl rings, often seen in the formation of beta-sheet in proteins. A considerable enhancement in the population of parallel alignments is observed with increasing the system size from 12 to 16 curcumin monomers. Due to the prevalence of such parallel alignment for large system size, a more closely…
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