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1.
Earlier studies have reported that trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), a naturally occurring osmolyte, is a universal stabilizer of proteins because it folds unstructured proteins and counteracts the deleterious effects of urea and salts on the structure and function of proteins. This conclusion has been reached from the studies of the effect of TMAO on proteins in the pH range 6.0-8.0. In this pH range TMAO is almost neutral (zwitterionic form), for it has a pK(a) of 4.66 +/- 0.10. We have asked the question of whether the effect of TMAO on protein stability is pH-dependent. To answer this question we have carried out thermal denaturation studies of lysozyme, ribonuclease-A, and apo-alpha-lactalbumin in the presence of various TMAO concentrations at different pH values above and below the pK(a) of TMAO. The main conclusion of this study is that near room temperature TMAO destabilizes proteins at pH values below its pK(a), whereas it stabilizes proteins at pH values above its pK(a). This conclusion was reached by determining the T(m) (midpoint of denaturation), delta H(m) (denaturational enthalpy change at T(m)), delta C(p) (constant pressure heat capacity change), and delta G(D) degrees (denaturational Gibbs energy change at 25 degrees C) of proteins in the presence of different TMAO concentrations. Other conclusions of this study are that T(m) and delta G(D) degrees depend on TMAO concentration at each pH value and that delta H(m) and the delta C(p) are not significantly changed in presence of TMAO.  相似文献   

2.
Kumar S  Tsai CJ  Nussinov R 《Biochemistry》2003,42(17):4864-4873
The difference between the heat (T(G)) and the cold (T(G)') denaturation temperatures defines the temperature range (T(Range)) over which the native state of a reversible two-state protein is thermodynamically stable. We have performed a correlation analysis for thermodynamic parameters in a selected data set of structurally nonhomologous single-domain reversible two-state proteins. We find that the temperature range is negatively correlated with the protein size and with the heat capacity change (DeltaC(p)) but is positively correlated with the maximal protein stability [DeltaG(T(S))]. The correlation between the temperature range and maximal protein stability becomes highly significant upon normalization of the maximal protein stability with protein size. The melting temperature (T(G)) also shows a negative correlation with protein size. Consistently, T(G) and T(G)' show opposite correlations with DeltaC(p), indicating a dependence of the T(Range) on the curvature of the protein stability curve. Substitution of proteins in our data set with their homologues and arbitrary addition or removal of a protein in the data set do not affect the outcome of our analysis. Simulations of the thermodynamic data further indicate that T(Range) is more sensitive to variations in curvature than to the slope of the protein stability curve. The hydrophobic effect in single domains is the principal reason for these observations. Our results imply that larger proteins may be stable over narrower temperature ranges and that smaller proteins may have higher melting temperatures, suggesting why protein structures often differentiate into multiple substructures with different hydrophobic cores. Our results have interesting implications for protein thermostability.  相似文献   

3.
Calorimetric measurements of absolute heat capacity have been performed for hydrated (11)S-globulin (0 < C(H(2)O) < 25%) and for lysozyme in a concentrated solution, both in the native and denatured states. The denaturation process is observed in hydrated and completely anhydrous proteins; it is accompanied by the appearance of heat capacity increment (Delta(N)(D)C(p)), as is the case for protein solutions. It has been shown that, depending on the temperature and water content, the hydrated denatured proteins can be in a highly elastic or glassy states. Glass transition is also observed in hydrated native proteins. It is found that the denaturation increment Delta(N)(D)C(p) in native protein, like the increment DeltaC(p) in denatured protein in glass transition at low water contents, is due to additional degrees of freedom of thermal motion in the protein globule. In contrast to the conventional notion, comparison of absolute C(p) values for hydrated denatured proteins with the C(p) values for denatured proteins in solution has indicated a dominant contribution of the globule thermal motion to the denaturation increment of protein heat capacity in solutions. The concentration dependence of denaturing heat absorption (temperature at its maximum, T(D), and thermal effect, DeltaQ(D)) and that of glass transition temperature, T(g), for (11)S-globulin have been studied in a wide range of water contents. General polymeric and specific protein features of these dependencies are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The effect of interactions of sorbitol with ribonuclease A (RNase A) and the resulting stabilization of structure was examined in parallel thermal unfolding and preferential binding studies with the application of multicomponent thermodynamic theory. The protein was stabilized by sorbitol both at pH 2.0 and pH 5.5 as the transition temperature, Tm, was increased. The enthalpy of the thermal denaturation had a small dependence on sorbitol concentration, which was reflected in the values of the standard free energy change of denaturation, delta delta G(o) = delta G(o) (sorbitol) - delta G(o)(water). Measurements of preferential interactions at 48 degrees C at pH 5.5, where protein is native, and pH 2.0 where it is denatured, showed that sorbitol is preferentially excluded from the denatured protein up to 40%, but becomes preferentially bound to native protein above 20% sorbitol. The chemical potential change on transferring the denatured RNase A from water to sorbitol solution is larger than that for the native protein, delta mu(2D) > delta mu(2N), which is consistent with the effect of sorbitol on the free energy change of denaturation. The conformity of these results to the thermodynamic expression of the effect of a co-solvent on denaturation, delta G(o)(W) + delta mu(D)(2)delta G(o)(S) + delta mu(2D), indicates that the stabilization of the protein by sorbitol can be fully accounted for by weak thermodynamic interactions at the protein surface that involve water reversible co-solvent exchange at thermodynamically non-neutral sites. The protein structure stabilizing action of sorbitol is driven by stronger exclusion from the unfolded protein than from the native structure.  相似文献   

6.
Differential scanning calorimetry has been used to investigate the thermodynamics of denaturation of ribonuclease T1 as a function of pH over the pH range 2-10, and as a function of NaCl and MgCl2 concentration. At pH 7 in 30 mM PIPES buffer, the thermodynamic parameters are as follows: melting temperature, T1/2 = 48.9 +/- 0.1 degrees C; enthalpy change, delta H = 95.5 +/- 0.9 kcal mol-1; heat capacity change, delta Cp = 1.59 kcal mol-1 K-1; free energy change at 25 degrees C, delta G degrees (25 degrees C) = 5.6 kcal mol-1. Both T1/2 = 56.5 degrees C and delta H = 106.1 kcal mol-1 are maximal near pH 5. The conformational stability of ribonuclease T1 is increased by 3.0 kcal/mol in the presence of 0.6 M NaCl or 0.3 M MgCl2. This stabilization results mainly from the preferential binding of cations to the folded conformation of the protein. The estimates of the conformational stability of ribonuclease T1 from differential scanning calorimetry are shown to be in remarkably good agreement with estimates derived from an analysis of urea denaturation curves.  相似文献   

7.
P Alexander  S Fahnestock  T Lee  J Orban  P Bryan 《Biochemistry》1992,31(14):3597-3603
We have cloned, expressed, and characterized two naturally occurring variations of the IgG-binding domain of streptococcal protein G. The domain is a stable cooperative folding unit of 56 amino acids, which maintains a unique folded structure without disulfide cross-links or tight ligand binding. We have studied the thermodynamics of the unfolding reaction for the two versions of this domain, designated B1 and B2, which differ by six amino acids. They have denaturation temperatures of 87.5 degrees C and 79.4 degrees C, respectively at pH 5.4, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry. Thermodynamic state functions for the unfolding reaction (delta G, delta H, delta S, and delta Cp) have been determined and reveal several interesting insights into the behavior of very small proteins. First, though the B1 domain has a heat denaturation point close to 90 degrees C, it is not unusually stable at physiologically relevant temperatures (delta G = 25 kJ/mol at 37 degrees C). This behavior occurs because the stability profile (delta G vs temperature) is flat and shallow due to the small delta S and delta Cp for unfolding. Related to this point is the second observation that small changes in the free energy of unfolding of the B-domain due to mutation or change in solvent conditions lead to large shifts in the heat denaturation temperature. Third, the magnitude and relative contributions of hydrophobic vs nonhydrophobic forces (per amino acid residue) to the total free energy of folding of the B-domain are remarkably typical of other globular proteins of much larger size.  相似文献   

8.
Absorbance-detected thermal denaturation studies of the C102T variant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae iso-1-ferricytochrome c were performed between pH 3 and 5. Thermal denaturation in this pH range is reversible, shows no concentration dependence, and is consistent with a 2-state model. Values for free energy (delta GD), enthalpy (delta HD), and entropy (delta SD) of denaturation were determined as functions of pH and temperature. The value of delta GD at 300 K, pH 4.6, is 5.1 +/- 0.3 kcal mol-1. The change in molar heat capacity upon denaturation (delta Cp), determined by the temperature dependence of delta HD as a function of pH (1.37 +/- 0.06 kcal mol-1 K-1), agrees with the value determined by differential scanning calorimetry. pH-dependent changes in the Soret region indicate that a group or groups in the heme environment of the denatured protein, probably 1 or both heme propionates, ionize with a pK near 4. The C102T variant exhibits both enthalpy and entropy convergence with a delta HD of 1.30 kcal mol-1 residue-1 at 373.6 K and a delta SD of 4.24 cal mol-1 K-1 residue-1 at 385.2 K. These values agree with those for other single-domain, globular proteins.  相似文献   

9.
An analysis of the thermodynamics of protein stability reveals a general tendency for proteins that denature at higher temperatures to have greater free energies of maximal stability. To a reasonable approximation, the temperature of maximal stability for the set of globular, water-soluble proteins surveyed by Robertson and Murphy occurs at T* approximately 283K, independent of the heat denaturation temperature, T(m). This observation indicates, at least for these proteins, that thermostability tends to be achieved through elevation of the stability curve rather than by broadening or through a horizontal shift to higher temperatures. The relationship between the free energy of maximal stability and the temperature of heat denaturation is such that an increase in maximal stability of approximately 0.008 kJ/mole/residue is, on average, associated with a 1 degrees C increase in T(m). An estimate of the energetic consequences of thermal expansion suggests that these effects may contribute significantly to the destabilization of the native state of proteins with increasing temperature.  相似文献   

10.
A Tamura  K Kimura  H Takahara  K Akasaka 《Biochemistry》1991,30(47):11307-11313
Cold denaturation and heat denaturation of the protein Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) were studied in the pH range 1.84-3.21 and in the temperature range -3-70 degrees C by circular dichroism and scanning microcalorimetry. The native structure of the protein was apparently most stabilized at about 20 degrees C and was denatured upon heating and cooling from this temperature. Each denaturation was reversible and cooperative, proceeding in two-state transitions, that is, from the native state to the cold-denatured state or from the native state to the heat-denatured state. The two denatured states, however, were not perfect random-coiled structures, and they differed from each other, indicating that there exist three states in this temperature range, i.e., cold denatured, native, and heat denatured. The difference between the cold and heat denaturations was indicated first by circular dichroism. The isodichroic point for the transition from the native state to the cold-denatured state was different from that from the native state to the heat-denatured state in the pH range between 3.21 and 2.45. Moreover, molar ellipticity for the cold-denatured state was different from that of the heat-denatured state, and the transition from the former to the latter was observed at pH values below 2. Values of van't Hoff enthalpies from the native state to the heat-denatured state at pH values between 3.21 and 2.45 were obtained by curve fitting of the CD data, and delta Cp = 1.82 (+/- 0.11) [kcal/(mol.K)] was obtained from the linear plot of the enthalpies against temperature. The parameters obtained from the heat denaturation studies gave curves for delta G zero which were not in agreement with the experimental data in the cold denaturation region when extrapolated to the low temperature. Moreover, the value of the apparent delta Cp for the cold denaturation in the pH range 3.03-2.45 was estimated to be different from that for the heat denaturation, indicating that the mechanism of the cold denaturation of SSI is different from a simple cold denaturation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Protein folding and the transfer of hydrocarbons from a dilute aqueous solution to the pure liquid phase are thermodynamically similar in that both processes remove nonpolar surface from water and both are accompanied by anomalously large negative heat capacity changes. On the basis of a limited set of published surface areas, we previously proposed that heat capacity changes (delta C degrees p) for the transfer of hydrocarbons from water to the pure liquid phase and for the folding of globular proteins exhibit the same proportionality to the reduction in water-accessible nonpolar surface area (delta Anp) [Spolar, R.S., Ha, J.H., & Record, M.T., Jr. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 8382-8385]. The consequence of this proposal is that the experimental delta C degrees p for protein folding can be used to obtain estimates of delta Anp and of the contribution to the stability of the folded state from removal of a nonpolar surface from water. In this paper, a rigorous molecular surface area algorithm [Richmond, T.J. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 178, 63-89] is applied to obtain self-consistent values of the water-accessible nonpolar surface areas of the native and completely denatured states of the entire set of globular proteins for which both crystal structures and delta C degrees p of folding have been determined and for the set of liquid and liquefiable hydrocarbons for which delta C degrees p of transfer are known. Both processes (hydrocarbon transfer and protein folding) exhibit the same direct proportionality between delta C degrees p and delta Anp. We conclude that the large negative heat capacity changes observed in protein folding and other self-assembly processes involving proteins provide a quantitative measure of the reduction in the water-accessible nonpolar surface area and of the contribution of the hydrophobic effect to the stability of the native state and to protein assembly.  相似文献   

12.
Solid model compounds and the thermodynamics of protein unfolding.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Analysis of thermodynamic data on the dissolution of solid cyclic dipeptides into water in terms of group additivity provides a rationale for the enthalpy and entropy convergence temperatures observed for small globular protein denaturation and the dissolution of model compounds into water. Convergence temperatures are temperatures at which the extrapolated enthalpy or entropy changes for a series of related compounds take on a common value. At these temperatures (TH* and TS*) the apolar contributions to the corresponding thermodynamic values (delta H degrees and delta S degrees) are shown to be zero. Other contributions such as hydrogen bonding and configurational effects can then be evaluated and their quantitative effects on the stability of globular proteins assessed. It is shown that the denaturational heat capacity is composed of a large positive contribution from the exposure of apolar groups and a significant negative contribution from the exposure of polar groups in agreement with previous results. The large apolar contribution suggests that a liquid hydrocarbon model of the hydrophobic effect does not accurately represent the apolar contribution to delta H degrees of denaturation. Rather, significant enthalpic stabilizing contributions are found to arise from peptide groups (hydrogen bonding). Combining the average structural features of globular proteins (i.e. number of residues, fraction of buried apolar groups and fraction of hydrogen bonds) with their specific group contributions permits a first-order prediction of the thermodynamic properties of proteins. The predicted values compare well with literature values for cytochrome c, myoglobin, ribonuclease A and lysozyme. The major thermodynamic features are described by the number of peptide and apolar groups in a given protein.  相似文献   

13.
Globular protein thermostability is characterized the cold denaturation, maximal stability (Tms) and heat denaturation temperatures. For mesophilic globular proteins, Tms typically ranges from -25 degrees C to +35 degrees C. We show that the indirect estimate of Tms from calorimetry and the direct estimate from chemical denaturation performed in a range of temperatures are in close agreement. The heat capacity change of unfolding per mol residue (delta Cp) alone is shown to accurately predict Tms. Delta Cp and hence Tms can be predicted solely from the protein sequence. The average difference in free energy of unfolding at the observed and predicted values of Tms is 1.0 kcal mol(-1), which is small compared to typical values of the total free energy of unfolding.  相似文献   

14.
Poland D 《Biopolymers》2001,58(1):89-105
Experimental data on the temperature dependence of the heat capacity of proteins can be used to calculate approximate enthalpy distributions for these molecules using the maximum-entropy method. C(p) (T) data is first used to calculate a set of moments of the enthalpy distribution, and these are then used to estimate the enthalpy distribution. If one knows the temperature expansion of the heat capacity through the (n - 2)th power of DeltaT (measured from the expansion center), then this is enough information to calculate the nth moment of the enthalpy distribution. Using four or more moments is in turn enough information to resolve bimodal behavior in the distribution. If the enthalpy distribution of a protein exhibits two distinct peaks, then this is direct experimental confirmation of a two-state mechanism of denaturation, the two peaks corresponding to the enthalpy of the native and unfolded species respectively. If the heat capacity of a protein exhibits a maximum at the denaturation temperature, then there is the possibility that the enthalpy distribution will be bimodal, but the presence of a maximum in the heat capacity is not a sufficient condition for this kind of behavior. We construct a phase diagram in terms of the appropriate variables to indicate when a maximum in the heat capacity will also give rise to bimodal behavior in the enthalpy distribution. We illustrate the phase diagram using literature data for a set of proteins.  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the structural stability of proteins, we analyzed the thermodynamics of an artificially designed 30-residue peptide. The designed peptide, NH2-EELLPLAEALAPLLEALLPLAEALAPLLKK-COOH (PERI COIL-1), with prolines at i + 7 positions, forms a pentameric alpha-helical structure in aqueous solution. The thermal denaturation curves of the CD at 222 nm (pH 7.5) show an unusual cold denaturation occurring well above 0 degrees C and no thermal denaturation is observable under 90 degrees C. This conformational change is reversible and depends on peptide concentration. A 2-state model between the monomeric denatured state (5D) and the pentameric helical state (H5) was sufficient to analyze 5 thermal denaturation curves of PERI COIL-1 with concentrations between 23 and 286 microM. The analysis was carried out by a nonlinear least-squares method using 3 fitting parameters: the midpoint temperature, Tm, the enthalpy change, delta H(Tm), and the heat capacity change, delta Cp. The association number (n = 5) was determined by sedimentation equilibrium and was not used as a fitting parameter. The heat capacity change suggests that the hydrophobic residues are buried in the helical state and exposed in the denatured one, as it occurs normally for natural globular proteins. On the other hand, the enthalpy and the entropy changes have values close to those found for coiled-coils and are quite distinct from typical values reported for natural globular proteins. In particular, the enthalpy change extrapolated at 110 degrees C is about 3 kJ/mol per amino acid residue, i.e., half of the value found for globular proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The contributions of backbone NH group dynamics to the conformational heat capacity of the B1 domain of Streptococcal protein G have been estimated from the temperature dependence of 15N NMR-derived order parameters. Longitudinal (R1) and transverse (R2) relaxation rates, transverse cross-relaxation rates (eta(xy)), and steady state [1H]-15N nuclear Overhauser effects were measured at temperatures of 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 degrees C for 89-100% of the backbone secondary amide nitrogen nuclei in the B1 domain. The ratio R2/eta(xy) was used to identify nuclei for which conformational exchange makes a significant contribution to R2. Relaxation data were fit to the extended model-free dynamics formalism, incorporating an axially symmetric molecular rotational diffusion tensor. The temperature dependence of the order parameter (S2) was used to calculate the contribution of each NH group to conformational heat capacity (Cp) and a characteristic temperature (T*), representing the density of conformational energy states accessible to each NH group. The heat capacities of the secondary structure regions of the B1 domain are significantly higher than those of comparable regions of other proteins, whereas the heat capacities of less structured regions are similar to those in other proteins. The higher local heat capacities are estimated to contribute up to approximately 0.8 kJ/mol K to the total heat capacity of the B1 domain, without which the denaturation temperature would be approximately 9 degrees C lower (78 degrees C rather than 87 degrees C). Thus, variation of backbone conformational heat capacity of native proteins may be a novel mechanism that contributes to high temperature stabilization of proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Ruller R  Deliberto L  Ferreira TL  Ward RJ 《Proteins》2008,70(4):1280-1293
Directed evolution techniques have been used to improve the thermal stability of the xylanase A from Bacillus subtilis (XylA). Two generations of random mutant libraries generated by error prone PCR coupled with a single generation of DNA shuffling produced a series of mutant proteins with increasing thermostability. The most Thermostable XylA variant from the third generation contained four mutations Q7H, G13R, S22P, and S179C that showed an increase in melting temperature of 20 degrees C. The thermodynamic properties of a representative subset of nine XylA variants showing a range of thermostabilities were measured by thermal denaturation as monitored by the change in the far ultraviolet circular dichroism signal. Analysis of the data from these thermostable variants demonstrated a correlation between the decrease in the heat capacity change (deltaC(p)) with an increase in the midpoint of the transition temperature (T(m)) on transition from the native to the unfolded state. This result could not be interpreted within the context of the changes in accessible surface area of the protein on transition from the native to unfolded states. Since all the mutations are located at the surface of the protein, these results suggest that an explanation of the decrease in deltaC(p) should include effects arising from the protein/solvent interface.  相似文献   

18.
Proteins from (hyper-)thermophiles are known to exhibit high intrinsic stabilities. Commonly, their thermodynamic characterization is impeded by irreversible side reactions of the thermal analysis or calorimetrical problems. Small single-domain proteins are suitable candidates to overcome these obstacles. Here, the thermodynamics of the thermal denaturation of the recombinant cold-shock protein (Csp) from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima (Tm) was studied by differential scanning calorimetry. The unfolding transition can be described over a broad pH range (3.5-8.5) by a reversible two-state process. Maximum stability (DeltaG (25 degrees C)=6.5 kcal/mol) was observed at pH 5-6 where Tm Csp unfolds with a melting temperature at 95 degrees C. The heat capacity difference between the native and the denatured states is 1.1(+/-0.1) kcal/(mol K). At pH 7, thermal denaturation occurs at 82 degrees C. The corresponding free energy profile has its maximum at 30 degrees C with DeltaGN-->U=4.8(+/-0.5) kcal/mol. At the optimal growth temperature of T. maritima (80 degrees C), Tm Csp in the absence of ligands is only marginally stable, with a free energy of stabilization not far beyond the thermal energy. With the known stabilizing effect of nucleic acids in mind, this suggests a highly dynamical interaction of Tm Csp with its target molecules.  相似文献   

19.
In order to understand how subtle variations in lipid structure can influence the stability of an integral membrane protein, the purified, delipidated anion transport domain of human erythrocyte band 3 was reconstituted into a series of well-defined lipids and examined by differential scanning calorimetry. From the calorimetric scans, plots of denaturation temperature (Tm), enthalpy (delta Hd), and heat capacity (delta Cdp) as a function of phospholipid chain length, degree of unsaturation, headgroup type, and cholesterol content were constructed. The data show that the stability of the 55,000-dalton membrane-spanning domain of band 3 is exquisitely sensitive to the acyl chain length of its phospholipid environment, increasing almost linearly from a Tm of 47 degrees C in dimyristoleylphosphatidylcholine (C14:1) to 66 degrees C in dinervonylphosphatidylcholine (C24:1). The integral domain was also found to be significantly stabilized by increasing the degree of saturation of the fatty acyl chains and by elevating the cholesterol content of the membrane. Although band 3 was native in all reconstituted lipid systems, the transport protein's stability was clearly much greater in zwitterionic lipids (phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine) than anionic lipids (phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylglycerol). Enthalpy and delta Cdp values were generally within the ranges expected of globular proteins in the various reconstituted systems, except the values for the anionic and polyunsaturated phospholipids were anomalously low. Much of the data can be accounted for by the hypothesis that band 3 has a long hydrophobic cross-section and that a close match between the hydrophobic zone of the membrane-spanning protein and the nonpolar region of the bilayer is necessary for maximum protein stability. Because the integral domain of band 3 may be structurally representative of a larger group of transport proteins, the data should be useful in interpreting structural observations on protein-lipid interactions in other membrane systems.  相似文献   

20.
The temperature dependence of preferential solvent interactions with ribonuclease A in aqueous solutions of 30% sorbitol, 0.6 M MgCl2, and 0.6 M MgSO4 at low pH (1.5 and 2.0) and high pH (5.5) has been investigated. This protein was stabilized by all three co-solvents, more so at low pH than high pH (expect 0.6 M MgCl2 at pH 5.5). The preferential hydration of protein in all three co-solvents was high at temperatures below 30 degrees C and decreased with a further increase in temperature (for 0.6 M MgCl2 at pH 5.5, this was not significant), indicating a greater thermodynamic instability at low temperature than at high temperature. The preferential hydration of denatured protein (low pH, high temperature) was always greater than that of native protein (high pH, high temperature). In 30% sorbitol, the interaction passed to preferential binding at 45% for native ribonuclease A and at 55 degrees C for the denatured protein. Availability of the temperature dependence of the variation with sorbitol concentration of the chemical potential of the protein, (delta mu(2)/delta m3)T,p,m2, permitted calculation of the corresponding enthalpy and entropy parameters. Combination with available data on sorbitol concentration dependence of this interaction parameter gave (approximate) values of the transfer enthalpy, delta H2,tr, and transfer entropy delta S2,tr. Transfer of ribonuclease A from water into 30% sorbitol is characterized by positive values of the transfer free energy, transfer enthalpy, transfer entropy, and transfer heat capacity. On denaturation, the transfer enthalpy becomes more positive. This increment, however, is small relative to both the enthalpy of unfolding in water and to the transfer enthalpy of the native protein from water a 30% sorbitol solution.  相似文献   

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