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1.
Manganese(II) activation of the methionyl aminopeptidases from Escherichia coli (EcMetAP-I) and the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus (PfMetAP-II) was investigated. Maximum catalytic activity for both enzymes was obtained with 1 equiv of Mn(II), and the dissociation constants (K(d)) for the first metal binding site were found to be 6 +/- 0.5 and 1 +/- 0.5 microM for EcMetAP-I and PfMetAP-II, respectively. These K(d) values were verified by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and found to be 3.0 +/- 0.2 and 1.4 +/- 0.2 microM for EcMetAP-I and PfMetAP-II, respectively. The hydrolysis of MGMM was measured in triplicate between 25 and 85 degrees C at eight substrate concentrations ranging from 2 to 20 mM for PfMetAP-II. Both specific activity and K(m) values increased with increasing temperature. An Arrhenius plot was constructed from the kcat values and was found to be linear over the temperature range 25-85 degrees C. The activation energy for the Mn(II)-loaded PfMetAP-II hydrolysis of MGMM was found to be 25.7 kJ/mol while the remaining thermodynamic parameters calculated at 25 degrees C are DeltaG+ = 50.1 kJ/mol, DeltaH+ = 23.2 kJ/mol, and DeltaS++ = -90.2 J x mol(-1) x K(-1).  相似文献   

2.
Anbazhagan V  Swamy MJ 《FEBS letters》2005,579(13):2933-2938
PDC-109 binds to sperm plasma membranes by specific interaction with choline phospholipids and induces cholesterol efflux, a necessary event before capacitation - and subsequent fertilization - can occur. The binding of phosphorylcholine (PrC) and lysophosphatidylcholine (Lyso-PC) with PDC-109 was investigated by monitoring the ligand-induced changes in the absorption spectrum of PDC-109. At 20 degrees C, the association constants (K(a)), for PrC and Lyso-PC were obtained as 81.4M(-1) and 2.02 x 10(4) M(-1), respectively, indicating that the binding of Lyso-PC to PDC-109 is 250-fold stronger than that of PrC. From the temperature dependence of the K(a) values, enthalpy of binding (DeltaH(0)) and entropy of binding (DeltaS(0)), were obtained as -79.7 and -237.1 J mol(-1)K(-1) for PrC and -73.0 kJ mol(-1) and -167.3 J mol(-1)K(-1) for Lyso-PC, respectively. These results demonstrate that although the binding of these two ligands is driven by enthalpic forces, smaller negative entropy of binding associated with Lyso-PC results in its significantly stronger binding.  相似文献   

3.
The interaction of biologicalmacromolecules, whether protein-DNA, antibody-antigen, hormone-receptor, etc., illustrates the complexity and diversity of molecular recognition. The importance of such interactions in the immune response, signal transduction cascades, and gene expression cannot be overstated. It is of great interest to determine the nature of the forces that stabilize the interaction. The thermodynamics of association are characterized by the stoichiometry of the interaction (n), the association constant (K(a)), the free energy (DeltaG(b)), enthalpy (DeltaH(b)), entropy (DeltaS(b)), and heat capacity of binding (DeltaC(p)). In combination with structural information, the energetics of binding can provide a complete dissection of the interaction and aid in identifying the most important regions of the interface and the energetic contributions. Various indirect methods (ELISA, RIA, surface plasmon resonance, etc.) are routinely used to characterize biologically important interactions. Here we describe the use of isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) in the study of protein-protein interactions. ITC is the most quantitative means available for measuring the thermodynamic properties of a protein-protein interaction. ITC measures the binding equilibrium directly by determining the heat evolved on association of a ligand with its binding partner. In a single experiment, the values of the binding constant (K(a)), the stoichiometry (n), and the enthalpy of binding (DeltaH(b)) are determined. The free energy and entropy of binding are determined from the association constant. The temperature dependence of the DeltaH(b) parameter, measured by performing the titration at varying temperatures, describes the DeltaC(p) term. As a practical application of the method, we describe the use of ITC to study the interaction between cytochrome c and two monoclonal antibodies.  相似文献   

4.
Dignam JD  Nada S  Chaires JB 《Biochemistry》2003,42(18):5333-5340
The interaction of adenine nucleotides with glycyl-tRNA synthetase was examined by several experimental approaches. ATP and nonsubstrate ATP analogues render glycyl-tRNA synthetase more resistant to digestion by a number of proteases (thrombin, Arg-C, and chymotrypsin) at concentrations that correlate with their Michaelis constants or inhibition constants, consistent with their exerting an effect by binding at the ATP site. Glycine had little effect alone but potentiated the effect of ATP in increasing the resistance to thrombin digestion, consistent with the formation of an enzyme-bound adenylate. No protection from thrombin digestion was afforded by tRNA(gly). Binding constants were determined by isothermal titration calorimetry at 25 degrees C for ATP (2.5 x 10(5) M(-1)), AMPPNP (3.7 x 10(5) M(-1)), and AMPPCP (2.2 x 10(6) M(-1)). The nucleotides had similar values for DeltaH (-71 kJ mol(-1)), with values for TDeltaS that accounted for the differences in the binding constants. Near-ultraviolet CD spectra of the enzyme-nucleotide complexes indicate that the nucleotides are bound in the anti configuration. A glycyl-adenylate analogue, glycine sulfamoyl adenosine (GSAd), bound with a large value for DeltaH (-187 kJ mol(-1)), which was balanced by a large TDeltaS term to give a binding constant (3.7 x 10(6) M(-1)) only slightly larger than that of AMPPCP. Glycine binding to the enzyme could not be detected calorimetrically, and its presence did not change the thermodynamic parameters for binding of AMPPCP. AMPPNP and AMPPCP were not substrates for glycyl-tRNA synthetase. Analysis of the temperature dependence of ATP binding indicated that the heat capacity change is small, whereas the binding of GSAd is accompanied by a large negative heat capacity change (-2.6 kJ K(-1) mol(-1)). Titrations performed in buffers with different ionization enthalpies indicate that the large value for DeltaH for the adenylate analogue does not arise from a coupled protonation event. Differential scanning calorimetry indicated that glycyl-tRNA synthetase is stabilized by nucleotides. Unfolding of the protein is irreversible, and thermodynamic parameters for unfolding could therefore not be determined. The results are consistent with a significant conformational transition in glycyl-tRNA synthetase coupled to the binding of GSAd.  相似文献   

5.
The temperature-dependences of the second-order rate constants (k) of the reactions of the catalytic site thiol groups of two cysteine peptidases papain (EC 3.4.22.2) and actinidin (EC 3.4.22.14) with a series of seven 2-pyridyl disulphide reactivity probes (R-S-S-2-Py, in which R provides variation in recognition features) were determined at pH 6.7 at temperatures in the range 4-30 degrees C by stopped-flow methodology and were used to calculate values of DeltaS++, DeltaH++ and DeltaG++. The marked changes in DeltaS++ from negative to positive in the papain reactions consequent on provision of increase in the opportunities for key non-covalent recognition interactions may implicate microsite desolvation in binding site-catalytic site signalling to provide a catalytically relevant transition state. The substantially different behaviour of actinidin including apparent masking of changes in DeltaH++ by an endothermic conformational change suggests a difference in mechanism involving kinetically significant conformational change.  相似文献   

6.
Leesch VW  Bujons J  Mauk AG  Hoffman BM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(33):10132-10139
Cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) can bind as many as two cytochrome c (Cc) molecules in an electrostatic complex. The location of the two binding domains on CcP has been probed by photoinduced interprotein electron transfer (ET) between zinc-substituted horse cytochrome c (ZnCc) and CcP with surface charge-reversal mutations and by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). These results, which are the first experimental evidence for the location of domain 2, indicate that the weak-binding domain includes residues 146-150 on CcP. CcP(E290K) has a charge-reversal mutation in the tight-binding domain, which should weaken binding, and it weakens the 1:1 complex; K(1) decreases 20-fold at 18 mM ionic strength. We have employed two mutations to probe the proposed location for the weak-binding domain on the CcP surface: (i) D148K, a "detrimental" mutation with a net (+2) change in the charge of CcP, and (ii) K149E, a "beneficial" mutation with a net (-2) change in the charge. The interactions between FeCc and CcP(WT and K149E) also have been studied with ITC. The CcP(D148K) mutation causes no substantial change in the 2:1 binding but an increase in the reactivity of the 2:1 complex. The latter can be interpreted as a long-range influence on the heme environment or, more likely, the enhancement of a minority subset of binding conformations with favorable pathways for ET. CcP(K149E) has a charge-reversal mutation in the weak-binding domain that produces a substantial increase in the 2:1 binding constant as measured by both quenching and ITC. For the 1:1 complex of CcP(WT), DeltaG(1) = -8.2 kcal/mol (K(1) = 1.3 x 10(6) M(-)(1)), DeltaH(1) = +2.7 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(1) = +37 cal/K.mol at 293 K; for the second binding stage, K(2) < 5 x 10(3) M(-)(1), but accurate thermodynamic parameters were not obtained. For the 1:1 complex of CcP(K149E), DeltaG(1) = -8.5 kcal/mol (K(1) = 2 x 10(6) M(-)(1)), DeltaH(1) = +2. 0 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(1) = +36 cal/K.mol; for the second stage, DeltaG(2) = -5.5 kcal/mol (K(1) = 1.3 x 10(4) M(-)(1)), DeltaH(2) = +2.9 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(2) = +29 cal/K.mol.  相似文献   

7.
Interaction kinetic and thermodynamic analyses provide information beyond that obtained in general inhibition studies, and may contribute to the design of improved inhibitors and increased understanding of molecular interactions. Thus, a biosensor-based method was used to characterize the interactions between HIV-1 protease and seven inhibitors, revealing distinguishing kinetic and thermodynamic characteristics for the inhibitors. Lopinavir had fast association and the highest affinity of the tested compounds, and the interaction kinetics were less temperature-dependent as compared with the other inhibitors. Amprenavir, indinavir and ritonavir showed non-linear temperature dependencies of the kinetics. The free energy, enthalpy and entropy (DeltaG, DeltaH, DeltaS) were determined, and the energetics of complex association (DeltaG(on), DeltaH(on), DeltaS(on)) and dissociation (DeltaG(off), DeltaH(off), DeltaS(off)) were resolved. In general, the energetics for the studied inhibitors was in the same range, with the negative free energy change (DeltaG < 0) due primarily to increased entropy (DeltaS > 0). Thus, the driving force of the interaction was increased degrees of freedom in the system (entropy) rather than the formation of bonds between the enzyme and inhibitor (enthalpy). Although the DeltaG(on) and DeltaG(off) were in the same range for all inhibitors, the enthalpy and entropy terms contributed differently to association and dissociation, distinguishing these phases energetically. Dissociation was accompanied by positive enthalpy (DeltaH(off) > 0) and negative entropy (DeltaS(off) < 0) changes, whereas association for all inhibitors except lopinavir had positive entropy changes (DeltaS(on) > 0), demonstrating unique energetic characteristics for lopinavir. This study indicates that this type of data will be useful for the characterization of target-ligand interactions and the development of new inhibitors of HIV-1 protease.  相似文献   

8.
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) is a fast and robust method to study the physical basis of molecular interactions. A single well-designed experiment can provide complete thermodynamic characterization of a binding reaction, including K(a), DeltaG, DeltaH, DeltaS and reaction stoichiometry (n). Repeating the experiment at different temperatures allows determination of the heat capacity change (DeltaC(P)) of the interaction. Modern calorimeters are sensitive enough to probe even weak biological interactions making ITC a very popular method among biochemists. Although ITC has been applied to protein studies for many years, it is becoming widely applicable in RNA biochemistry as well, especially in studies which involve RNA folding and RNA interactions with small molecules, proteins and with other RNAs. This review focuses on best practices for planning, designing and executing effective ITC experiments when one or more of the reactants is an RNA.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of several metallo-porphyrins with the galactose-specific lectin from Trichosanthes cucumeirna (TCSL) has been investigated. Difference absorption spectroscopy revealed that significant changes occur in the Soret band region of the porphyrins upon binding to TCSL and these changes have been monitored to obtain association constants (Ka) and stoichiometry of binding (n). The dimeric lectin binds two porphyrin molecules and the presence of the specific saccharide lactose did not affect porphyrin binding significantly, indicating that the sugar and the porphyrin bind at different sites. The Ka values obtained for the binding of different porphyrins with TCSL at 25 degrees C were in the range of 2 x 10(3)-5 x 10(5) m(-1). Association constants for meso-tetra(4-sulphonatophenyl)porphyrinato copper(II) (CuTPPS), a porphyrin bearing four negative charges and meso-tetra(4-methylpyridinium)porphyrinato copper(II) (CuTMPyP), a porphyrin with four positive charges, were determined at several temperatures; from the temperature dependence of the association constants, the thermodynamic parameters change in enthalpy (DeltaH degrees ) and change in entropy (DeltaS degrees ) associated with the binding process were estimated. The thermodynamic data indicate that porphyrin binding to TCSL is driven largely by a favourable entropic contribution; the enthalpic contribution is very small, suggesting that the binding process is governed primarily by hydrophobic forces. Stopped-flow spectroscopic measurements show that binding of CuTMPyP to TCSL takes place by a single-step process and at 20 degrees C, the association and dissociation rate constants were 1.89 x 10(4) m(-1).s(-1) and 0.29 s(-1), respectively.  相似文献   

10.
T Wieprecht  M Beyermann  J Seelig 《Biochemistry》1999,38(32):10377-10387
Magainins are positively charged amphiphatic peptides which permeabilize cell membranes and display antimicrobial activity. They are usually thought to bind specifically to anionic lipids, and binding studies have been performed almost exclusively with negatively charged membranes. Here we demonstrate that binding of magainins to neutral membranes, a reaction which is difficult to assess with spectroscopic means, can be followed with high accuracy using isothermal titration calorimetry. The binding mechanism can be described by a surface partition equilibrium after correcting for electrostatic repulsion by means of the Gouy-Chapman theory. Unusual thermodynamic parameters are observed for the binding process. (i) The three magainin analogues that were investigated bind to neutral membranes with large exothermic reaction enthalpies DeltaH of -15 to -18 kcal/mol (at 30 degrees C). (ii) The reaction enthalpies increase with increasing temperature, leading to a large positive heat capacity DeltaC(p) of approximately 130 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) (at 25 degrees C). (iii) The Gibbs free energies of binding DeltaG are between -6.4 and -8.6 kcal/mol, resulting in a large negative binding entropy DeltaS. The binding of magainin to small unilamellar vesicles is hence an enthalpy-driven reaction. The negative DeltaH and DeltaS and the large positive DeltaC(p) contradict the conventional understanding of the hydrophobic effect. CD experiments reveal that the membrane-bound fraction of magainin is approximately 80% helical at 8 degrees C, decreasing to approximately 60% at 45 degrees C. Since the random coil --> alpha-helix transition in aqueous solution is known to be an exothermic process, the same process occurring at the membrane surface is shown to account for up to 65% of the measured reaction enthalpy. In addition to membrane-facilitated helix formation, the second main driving force for membrane binding is the insertion of the nonpolar amino acid side chains into the lipid bilayer. It also contributes a negative DeltaH and follows the pattern for the nonclassical hydrophobic effect. Addition of cholesterol drastically reduces the extent of peptide binding and reveals an enthalpy-entropy compensation mechanism. Membrane permeability was measured with a dye assay and correlated with the extent of peptide binding. The level of dye efflux is linearly related to the amount of surface-bound peptide and can be traced back to a membrane perturbation effect.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetic and thermodynamic effects of aspirin and diclofenac on the activity of adenosine deaminase (ADA) were studied in 50 mM phosphate buffer pH = 7.5 at 27 and 37 degrees C, using UV-Vis spectrophotometry and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Aspirin exhibits competitive inhibition at 27 and 37 degrees C and the inhibition constants are 42.8 and 96.8 microM respectively, using spectrophotometry. Diclofenac shows competitive behavior at 27 degrees C and uncompetitive at 37 degrees C with inhibition constants of 56.4 and 30.0 microM, at respectively. The binding constant and enthalpy of binding, at 27 degrees C are 45 microM, - 64.5 kJ/mol and 61 microM, - 34.5 kJ/mol for aspirin and diclofenac. Thermodynamic data revealed that the binding process for these ADA inhibitors is enthalpy driven. QSAR studies by principal component analysis implemented in SPSS show that the large, polar, planar, and aromatic nucleoside and small, aromatic and polar non-nucleoside molecules have lower inhibition constants.  相似文献   

12.
In the study of 1:1 binding, M + X right arrow over left arrow MX, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) can be used successfully at values of c=K[M](0) well below the value 1.0 that is often considered its lower limit. However, analysis of low-c ITC data may require freezing the stoichiometry parameter n, and that is thought to be prohibitive for biological systems, where n can be poorly known. Here it is noted that the least-squares estimates of the binding constant K are virtually independent of errors in n at low c, permitting reliable determination of K and, from its temperature dependence, DeltaH degrees and n, down to c=10(-4) or lower, ligand solubility permitting.  相似文献   

13.
Trapp O  Schurig V 《Chirality》2002,14(6):465-470
The axially chiral allenes dimethyl-1,3-allenedicarboxylate 1 and diethyl-1,3-allenedicarboxylate 2 show characteristic plateau formation during enantioselective GC separation on the chiral stationary liquid phase Chirasil-beta-Dex. The elution profiles, obtained from temperature-dependent dynamic GC (DGC) experiments (1: 100-140 degrees C; 2: 110-150 degrees C) were evaluated with the recently derived approximation function (AF) k1(approx) = f(t(R)(A),t(R)(B),w(h)(A),h(plateau), N) to yield the enantiomerization rate constant directly k(1). These values were compared with those obtained by computer-aided simulation with ChromWin. The Eyring activation parameters of the experimental interconversion profiles were determined to be: DeltaG(#)(298.15 K) = 103.6 +/- 0.9 kJ mol(-1), DeltaH(#) = 44.7 +/- 0.4 kJ mol(-1), DeltaS(#) = -198 +/- 7 J K(1) mol(-1) for dimethyl-1,3-allenedicarboxylate 1, and DeltaG(#)(298.15 K) = 103.5 +/- 1.1 kJ mol(-1), DeltaH(#) = 44.7 +/- 0.5 kJ mol(-1), DeltaS(#) = -197 +/- 9 J K(-1) mol(-1) for diethyl-1,3-allenedicarboxylate 2. The approximation function (AF) presented here allows the fast determination of rate constants k(1) and activation barriers of enantiomerization DeltaG(#) from chromatographic parameters without extensive computer simulation.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The software program DCXplorer is introduced to directly access interconversion rate constants in dynamic chromatography and electrophoresis. The program utilizes the unified equation of chromatography which can evaluate reaction rate constants of all kinds of first order reactions of processes taking place during a separation process. Evaluations with DCXplorer are facilitated by a graphical user interface which allows zooming into the area of interest of an interconversion profile and calculating reaction rate constants without a time consuming simulation process. DCXplorer was applied to determine the enantiomerization barrier of the diuretic drug chlorthalidone by pressure supported dynamic capillary electrokinetic chromatography (DEKC) under acidic conditions at pH 5.00 and pH 3.75. Activation parameters DeltaH(++) and DeltaS(++) were obtained from temperature dependent measurements between 15.0 and 35.0 degrees C in 5 K steps at pH 3.75 and between 30.0 and 50.0 degrees C in 10K steps at pH 5.00.  相似文献   

16.
Binding constant data K degrees (T) are commonly subjected to van't Hoff analysis to extract estimates of DeltaH degrees, DeltaS degrees, and DeltaCP degrees for the process in question. When such analyses employ unweighted least-squares fitting of lnK degrees to an appropriate function of the temperature T, they are tacitly assuming constant relative error in K degrees. When this assumption is correct, the statistical errors in DeltaG degrees, DeltaH degrees, DeltaS degrees, DeltaCP degrees, and the T-derivative of DeltaCP degrees (if determined) are all independent of the actual values of K degrees and can be computed from knowledge of just the T values at which K degrees is known and the percent error in K degrees. All of these statistical errors except that for the highest-order constant are functions of T, so they must normally be calculated using a form of the error propagation equation that is not widely known. However, this computation can be bypassed by defining DeltaH degrees as a polynomial in (T-T0), the coefficients of which thus become DeltaH degrees, DeltaCP degrees, and 1/2 dDeltaCP degrees/dT at T=T0. The errors in the key quantities can then be computed by just repeating the fit for different T0. Procedures for doing this are described for a representative data analysis program. Results of such calculations show that expanding the T range from 10-40 to 5-45 degrees C gives significant improvement in the precision of all quantities. DeltaG degrees is typically determined with standard error a factor of approximately 30 smaller than that for DeltaH degrees. Accordingly, the error in TDeltaS degrees is nearly identical to that in DeltaH degrees. For 4% error in K degrees, the T-derivative in DeltaCP degrees cannot be determined unless it is approximately 10 cal mol-1 K-2 or greater; and DeltaCP degrees must be approximately 50 cal mol-1 K-1. Since all errors scale with the data error and inversely with the square root of the number of data points, the present results for 4% error cover any other relative error and number of points, for the same approximate T structure of the data.  相似文献   

17.
Menze MA  Hellmann N  Decker H  Grieshaber MK 《Biochemistry》2000,39(35):10806-10811
Hemocyanin serves as an oxygen carrier in the hemolymph of the European lobster Homarus vulgaris. The oxygen binding behavior of the pigment is modulated by metabolic effectors such as lactate and urate. Urate and caffeine binding to 12-meric hemocyanin (H. vulgaris) was studied using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Binding isotherms were determined for fully oxygenated hemocyanin between pH 7.55 and 8.15. No pH dependence of the binding parameters could be found for either effector. Since the magnitude of the Bohr effect depends on the urate concentration, the absence of any pH dependence of urate and caffeine binding to oxygenated hemocyanin suggests two conformations of the pigment under deoxygenated conditions. Urate binds to two identical binding sites (n = 2) each with a microscopic binding constant K of 8500 M(-1) and an enthalpy change DeltaH degrees of -32.3 kcal mol(-1). Caffeine binds cooperatively to hemocyanin with two microscopic binding constants: K(1) = 14 100 M(-1) and K(2) = 40 400 M(-1). The corresponding enthalpy changes in binding are as follows: DeltaH degrees (1) = -23.3 kcal mol(-1) and DeltaH degrees (2) = -27.1 kcal mol(-1). The comparison of urate and caffeine binding to the oxygenated pigment indicates the existence of two protein conformations for oxygen-saturated hemocyanin. Since effector binding is not influenced by protons, four different conformations are required to create a convincing explanation for caffeine and urate binding curves. This was predicted earlier on the basis of the analysis of oxygen binding to lobster hemocyanin, employing the nesting model.  相似文献   

18.
Characterizing how chemical compounds bind to human serum albumin (HSA) is essential in evaluating drug candidates. Using warfarin as a test system, we validate the application of BIACORE SPR biosensors to reliably determine binding constants for drug/HSA interactions. The binding responses for warfarin over HSA surfaces were extremely reproducible even though warfarin is small compared to the size of the immobilized protein. At high concentrations, warfarin bound at more than one site on HSA, which is consistent with its known binding properties. The affinity we determined for the high-affinity site (K(25 degrees C)(d) = 3.7 +/- 1.2 microM), as well as the dissociation rate constant (k(25 degrees C)(d) = 1.2 s(-1)), are also consistent with binding constants determined previously. These results validate the biosensor technology and illustrate how BIACORE can be used to study drug/HSA interactions in a high-resolution mode. Using a set of 10 test compounds, we present a protocol for determining equilibrium dissociation constants for HSA in a high-throughput mode. Our method involves working at low compound concentrations and fitting the equilibrium data for all compounds simultaneously. We show that the % bound values determined by SPR correlate with the values determined by solution-based methods. The ability to examine directly the binding of small molecules (130-800 Da), coupled with minimal sample requirements and automated instrumentation, makes BIACORE technology applicable for evaluating drug/HSA interactions.  相似文献   

19.
A thermodynamic analysis of the interaction of 125I-labeled human chorionic gonadotropin (IhCG) with two of its monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) was carried out. The dissociation profile of IhCG-MAb complex conforms to a two-step model. vant Hoff enthalpies were calculated with the K(A) (equilibrium constant) values obtained from dissociation at different temperatures. Free energy and entropy changes were calculated using the standard equations. DeltaH values for one of the MAbs, viz. VM7 were favorable at temperatures beyond 30 degrees C. Interestingly, the DeltaS values were also favorable at all temperatures. In the case of MAb VM4a, however, the interaction throughout the temperature range was driven by large favorable entropic contributions, indicating the importance of hydrophobic interaction in the binding of this MAb to hCG. The energetics of the interaction of these two monoclonals with hCG is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Site-specific protein-DNA complexes vary greatly in structural properties and in the thermodynamic strategy for achieving an appropriate binding free energy. A better understanding of the structural and energetic engineering principles might lead to rational methods for modification or design of such proteins. RESULTS: A novel analysis of ten site-specific protein-DNA complexes reveals a striking correspondence between the degree of imposed DNA distortion and the thermodynamic parameters of each system. For complexes with relatively undistorted DNA, favorable enthalpy change drives unfavorable entropy change, whereas for complexes with highly distorted DNA, unfavorable DeltaH degrees is driven by favorable DeltaS degrees. We show for the first time that protein-DNA associations have isothermal enthalpy-entropy compensation, distinct from temperature-dependent compensation, so DeltaH degrees and DeltaS degrees do not vary independently. All complexes have favorable DeltaH degrees from direct protein-DNA recognition interactions and favorable DeltaS degrees from water release. Systems that strongly distort the DNA nevertheless have net unfavorable DeltaH degrees as the result of molecular strain, primarily associated with the base pair destacking. These systems have little coupled protein folding and the strained interface suffers less immobilization, so DeltaS degrees is net favorable. By contrast, systems with little DNA distortion have net favorable DeltaH degrees, which must be counterbalanced by net unfavorable DeltaS degrees, derived from loss of vibrational entropy (a result of isothermal enthalpy-entropy compensation) and from coupling between DNA binding and protein folding. CONCLUSIONS: Isothermal enthalpy-entropy compensation implies that a structurally optimal, unstrained fit is achieved only at the cost of entropically unfavorable immobilization, whereas an enthalpically weaker, strained interface entails smaller entropic penalties.  相似文献   

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