The crystal structure of an octadecahydrated complex between two inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP) has been determined at atomic resolution, which reveals the hydrogen bonding and the coordination cooperativity of water molecules to nucleotide recognition. The crystal belongs to monoclinic space group P2(1) with cell dimensions a = 8.65(1), b = 21.90(1), c = 12.37(1)A, and beta = 110.38(9)degrees. The ribose hydroxyls, purine N7, keto(O6) bonded water molecules W1, W2, W5, W6, W8 and the phosphate bridge forming water oxygens of W4, W7, W11 appear to play an invariant role in their hydrogen bonding interactions with the IMPs. The synergistic role of the water molecules W5, W6, W8 in the purine staking domain (N27 ... W5 = 2.583, N17 ... W5 = 2.563, O16 ... W8 = 2.759, O26 ... W6 = 2.723 Angstrom) have been clearly observed for the first time. The complexation of the water molecules through variable hydrogen bonding coordination indicate their functional involvement through extensive cooperative donor-acceptor network mechanism. The occurrence of hydrogen-bonded water spines, water bridges and their interplay in the structural association of IMPs could indicate the possible viability of those aquatic centers in the biological situation.