首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Bagger HL  Fuglsang CC  Westh P 《Biochemistry》2003,42(34):10295-10300
Regulation of hydration behavior, and the concomitant effects on solubility and other properties, has been suggested as a main function of protein glycosylation. In this work, we have studied the hydration of the heavily glycosylated Peniophora lycii phytase in solutions (0.15-1.1 m) of the two compatible solutes glycerol and sorbitol. Osmometric measurements showed that glycerol preferentially binds to phytase (i.e., glycerol-glycoprotein interactions are more favorable than water-glycoprotein interactions resulting in a preferential accumulation of glycerol near the protein interface), while sorbitol is preferentially excluded from the hydration sphere (water-glycoprotein interactions are the more favorable). To assess contributions from carbohydrate and peptide moieties, respectively, we compared phytase (Phy) and a modified, yet enzymatically active form (dgPhy) in which 90% of the glycans had been removed. This revealed that both polyols showed a pronounced and approximately equal degree of preferential binding to the carbohydrate moiety. This preferential binding of polyols to glycans is in contrast to the exclusion from peptide interfaces observed here (for dgPhy) and in numerous previous reports on nonglycosylated proteins. Despite the distinct differences between peptide and carbohydrate groups, glycosylation had no effect on the stabilizing action provided by glycerol and sorbitol. On the basis of this, it was concluded that the carbohydrate mantle of Phy is equally accessible in the native and thermally denatured states, respectively (most likely fully accessible in both), and thus that its interactions with compatible solutes have little or no effect on conformational equilibria of the glycoprotein. For solubility and aggregation equilibria, on the other hand, the results suggest a polyol-induced stabilization of monomeric forms.  相似文献   

2.
In the eukaryotic cell, protein glycosylation takes place in the crowded environment of the endoplasmatic reticulum. With the purpose of elucidating the impact of high concentration on the interactions of glycoproteins, we have conducted a series of small-angle x-ray scattering experiments on the heavily glycosylated enzyme Peniophora lycii phytase (Phy) and its deglycosylated counterpart (dgPhy). The small-angle x-ray scattering data were analyzed using an individual numerical form factor for each of the two glycoforms combined with two structure factors, a hard sphere and a screened coulomb potential structure factor, respectively, as determined by ab initio analysis. Based on this data analysis, three main conclusions could be drawn. First, at comparable protein concentrations (mg/ml), the relative excluded volume of Phy was ∼75% higher than that of dgPhy, showing that the glycans significantly increase excluded-volume interactions. Second, the relative excluded volume of dgPhy increased with concentration, as expected; however, the opposite effect was observed for Phy, where the relative excluded volume decreased in response to increasing protein concentration. Third, a clear difference in the effect of salinity on the excluded-volume interactions was observed between the two glycol forms. Although the relative excluded volume of dgPhy decreased with increasing ionic strength, the relative excluded volume of Phy was basically insensitive to increased salinity. We suggest that protrusion forces from the glycans contribute to steric stabilization of the protein, and that glycosylation helps to sustain repulsive electrostatic interactions under crowded conditions. In combination, this aids in stabilizing high concentrations of glycosylated proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Glycosylation affects the physical properties of proteins in a number of ways including solubility and aggregation behavior. To elucidate the mechanism underlying these effects, we have measured second virial coefficients (A2) of the heavily glycosylated pheniophora lycii phytase (Phy) and its enzymatically deglycosylated counterpart (dgPhy) in native and in denatured form by means of small angle x-ray scattering. The measured A2-values show that the native forms of Phy and dgPhy are equally repulsive at the studied pH 8 where A2 equals 10.9 ± 0.1 × 104 mL mol g−2. However, when thermally denatured, the A2 of dgPhy decreases to 9.0 ± 0.2 × 104 mL mol g−2 whereas it remained unchanged for Phy. In accord with earlier investigations, the p(r)-function measured here suggested that the glycans did not affect the peptide structure of the native protein. Conversely, glycosylation markedly changed the structure of thermally denatured protein. This was evident from the radius of gyration, which increased by 32% for Phy and only 11% for dgPhy on denaturation. We suggest that this expanding effect of the glycans on the denatured protein conformation relies on steric hindrance that limits the range of torsion angles available to the polypeptide.  相似文献   

4.
The interactions of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and two glyco-variants of the enzyme phytase from Peniophora lycii were investigated. One variant (Phy) was heavily glycosylated while the other (dgPhy) was enzymatically deglycosylated. Effects at 24 degrees C of titrating SDS to Phy and dgPhy were studied by Isothermal Titration Calorimetry (ITC) and Synchrotron Radiation Circular Dichroism (SRCD) spectroscopy. Comparisons of results for the two variants were used to elucidate glycan-surfactant interrelationships. The CD spectra suggested that both the native and the SDS-denatured states of the two variants were mutually similar, and hence that the denaturation process was structurally equivalent for the two glyco-variants. The denatured state was far from fully unfolded and probably retained a substantial content of native-like structure. Furthermore, it was found that the glycans brought about only a small increase in the resistance towards SDS induced denaturation. The SDS concentration required to denature half of the protein molecules differed less than 1 mM for the two variants. The affinity for SDS of both variants was unusually low. The amount of bound SDS (w/w) at different stages of the binding isotherm was 3-10 times lower than that reported for the most previously investigated globular proteins. Analysis of the relative affinity of the glycan and peptide moieties suggested that the carbohydrates bind much less surfactant. At saturation, glycans adsorbed about half as much SDS (in g/g) as the peptide moiety of Phy and about five times less than average proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of thermally induced aggregation of the glycoprotein Peniophora lycii phytase (Phy) and a deglycosylated form (dgPhy) was studied by dynamic (DLS) and static (SLS) light scattering. This provided a detailed insight into the time course of the formation of small aggregates ( approximately 10-100 molecules) of the enzyme. The thermodynamic stability of the two forms was also investigated using scanning calorimetry (DSC). It was found that the glycans strongly promoted kinetic stability (i.e., reduced the rate of irreversible denaturation) while leaving the equilibrium denaturation temperature, T(d), defined by DSC, largely unaltered. At pH 4.5-5.0, for example, dgPhy aggregated approximately 200 times faster than Phy, even though the difference in T(d) was only 1-3 degrees C. To elucidate the mechanism by which the glycans promote kinetic stability, we measured the effect of ionic strength and temperature on the aggregation rate. Also, the second virial coefficients (B(22)) for the two forms were measured by SLS. These results showed that the aggregation rate of Phy scaled with the concentration of thermally denatured protein. This suggested first-order kinetics with respect to the concentration of the thermally denatured state. A similar but less pronounced correlation was found for dgPhy, and it was suggested that while the aggregation process for the deglycosylated form is dominated by denatured protein, it also involves a smaller contribution from associating molecules in the native state. The measurements of B(22) revealed that dgPhy had slightly higher values than Phy. This suggests that dgPhy interacts more favorably with the buffer than Phy and hence rules out strong hydration of the glycans as the origin of their effect on the kinetic stability. On the basis of this and the effects of pH and ionic strength, we suggest that the inhibition of aggregation is more likely to depend on steric hindrance of the glycans in the aggregated form of the protein.  相似文献   

6.
T Arakawa  S N Timasheff 《Biochemistry》1987,26(16):5147-5153
The causes of the salting-in of beta-lactoglobulin by glycine and NaCl, a solubility behavior contrary to expectations, were probed by a detailed study of the interactions between these solvent components and the protein. The preferential interactions of beta-lactoglobulin with solvent components in aqueous glycine and NaCl systems have been compared with those of bovine serum albumin and lysozyme. At neutral pH, beta-lactoglobulin exhibited insignificant preferential interactions in glycine and NaCl at low cosolvent concentrations and an increasing preferential hydration at higher concentrations, the levels approaching the values expected from the other two proteins. These results indicate considerable binding of the electrolytes to beta-lactoglobulin, sufficient to compensate for the exclusion due to perturbation of the solvent surface tension. The difference between the preferential interactions of beta-lactoglobulin and the other proteins with these two solvent additives was shown to be the cause of the increase of beta-lactoglobulin solubility even at high concentrations of the additives, at which they have salting-out effects on the other proteins. The preferential interactions of NaCl with the three proteins were examined as a function of pH. The results showed no pH dependence of the preferential hydration for bovine serum albumin and lysozyme, while this parameter increased significantly for beta-lactoglobulin at lower pH. This suggests that the binding of electrolytes to beta-lactoglobulin is due to a unique charge distribution on the surface of the protein around neutral pH, which imparts to this protein a large dipole moment.  相似文献   

7.
A theory is presented on the solubility of proteins, in the hydrated as well as in the dry state, and in water as well as in organic solvents. To this effect, colloidal stability is assimilated with the solubility of the proteins, considered as hydrated entities. By means of a surface thermodynamic approach it can be shown that an increase in size of a hydrated protein must lead to insolubility, even in the absence of any change in a protein's surface properties. This can be substantiated experimentally by comparing the surface properties of immune complexes with those of their constituent immunoglobulins, as well as by comparing some of the properties of intact tobacco mosaic virus with those of its monomeric capsid subunits. Insolubilization of proteins by means of charge interactions as well as by dehydration is studied; an explanation is given of why precipitation caused by charge interactions is more likely to lead to partial irreversible denaturation than precipitation caused by protein-protein interactions brought about by partial dehydration (e.g., by “salting-out”). A link is established between the smallness (or even the negative value) of the interfacial tension between given proteins and various solvents and their solubility in these solvents. The energy of hydration of proteins can also be measured, and the differences between the free energies of interaction of dried and hydrated proteins with water point toward the additional processes underlying the solubilization, i.e., toward the conformational change of a protein in the process of becoming hydrated. The parameter of conformational change of a protein, while becoming hydrated, appears to be more closely linked to its degree of hydration than to its hydration energy.  相似文献   

8.
9.
T Arakawa  R Bhat  S N Timasheff 《Biochemistry》1990,29(7):1914-1923
The correlation between protein solubility and the preferential interactions of proteins with solvent components was critically examined with aqueous MgCl2 as the solvent system. Preferential interaction and solubility measurements with three proteins, beta-lactoglobulin, bovine serum albumin, and lysozyme, resulted in similar patterns of interaction. At acid pH (pH 2-3) and lower salt concentrations (less than 2 M), the proteins were preferentially hydrated, while at higher salt concentrations, the interaction was either that of preferential salt binding or low salt exclusion. At pH 4.5-5, all three proteins exhibited either very low preferential hydration or preferential binding of MgCl2. These results were analyzed in terms of the balance between salt binding and salt exclusion attributed to the increase in the surface tension of water by salts, which is invariant with conditions. It was shown that the increase in salt binding at high salt concentration is a reflection of mass action, while its decrease at acid pH is due to the electrostatic repulsion between Mg2+ ions and the high net positive charge on the protein. The preferential interaction pattern was paralleled by the variation of protein solubility with solvent conditions. Calculation of the transfer free energies from water to the salt solutions for proteins in solution and in the precipitate showed dependencies on salt concentration. This indicates that the nature of interactions between proteins and solvent components is the same in solution and in the solid state, which implies no change in protein structure during precipitation. Analysis of the transfer free energies and preferential interaction parameter in terms of the salting-in, salting-out, and weak ion binding contributions has led to the conclusions that, when the weak ion binding contribution is small, the predominant protein-salt interaction must be that of preferential salt exclusion most probably caused by the increase of the surface tension of water by addition of the salt. A necessary consequence of this is salting-out of the protein, if the protein structure is to remain unaltered.  相似文献   

10.
We studied the effect of organic solvents on the kinetics of porcine pancreatic lipase (pp) for the resolution of racemic glycidol through esterification with butyric acid. We quantified ppl hydration by measuring water sorption isotherms for the enzyme in the solvents/mixtures tested. The determination of initial rates as a function of enzyme hydration revealed that the enzyme exhibits maximum apparent activity in the solvents/mixtures at the same water content (9% to 11% w/w) within the associated experimental error. The maximum initial rates are different in all the media and correlate well with the logarithm of the molar solubility of water in the media, higher initial rates being observed in the solvents/mixtures with lower water solubilities. The data for the mixtures indicate that ppl apparent activity responds to bulk property of the solvent. Measurements of enzyme particle sizes in five of the solvents, as function of enzyme hydration, revealed that mean particle sizes increased with enzyme hydration in all the solvents, differences between solvents being more pronounced at enzyme hydration levels close to 10%. At this hydration level, solvents having a higher water content lead to lower reaction rates; these are the solvents where the mean enzyme particle sizes are greater. Calculation of the observable modulus indicates there are no internal diffusion limitations. The observed correlation between changes in initial rates and changes in external surface area of the enzyme particles suggests that interfacial activation of ppl is only effective at the external surface of the particles. Data obtained for the mixtures indicate that ppl enantioselectivity depends on specific solvent-enzyme interactions. We make reference to ppl hydration and activity in supercritical carbon dioxide. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Solvent conditions play a major role in a wide range of physical properties of proteins in solution. Organic solvents, including dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), have been used to precipitate, crystallize and denature proteins. We have studied here the interactions of DMSO with proteins by differential refractometry and amino acid solubility measurements. The proteins used, i.e., ribonuclease, lysozyme, beta-lactoglobulin and chymotrypsinogen, all showed negative preferential DMSO binding, or preferential hydration, at low DMSO concentrations, where they are in the native state. As the DMSO concentration was increased, the preferential interaction changed from preferential hydration to preferential DMSO binding, except for ribonuclease. The preferential DMSO binding correlated with structural changes and unfolding of these proteins observed at higher DMSO concentrations. Amino acid solubility measurements showed that the interactions between glycine and DMSO are highly unfavorable, while the interactions of DMSO with aromatic and hydrophobic side chains are favorable. The observed preferential hydration of the native protein may be explained from a combination of the excluded volume effects of DMSO and the unfavorable interaction of DMSO with a polar surface, as manifested by the unfavorable interactions of DMSO with the polar uncharged glycine molecule. Such an unfavorable interaction of DMSO with the native protein correlates with the enhanced self-association and precipitation of proteins by DMSO. Conversely, the observed conformational changes at higher DMSO concentration are due to increased binding of DMSO to hydrophobic and aromatic side chains, which had been newly exposed on protein unfolding.  相似文献   

12.
The relative self-diffusion coefficients D/Do, of water in various solutions, in fresh barnacle muscle fibers, and in membrane-damaged fibers equilibrated with several media have been estimated from NMR relaxation rates in the presence of applied field gradients. A model has been developed to account for the contributions to the observed reduction in D/Do from small organic solutes, and from the hydration and obstruction effect of both soluble macromolecules and myofilament proteins. Intracellular ions do not affect D/Do, but all tested organic solutes do. Solute effects are additive. When artificially combined in the proportions found in barnacle muscle ultracentrifugate (measured D/Do = 0.77), organic acids, small nitrogenous solutes, and proteins give D/Do = 0.77. After correcting the D/Do measured in fibers for this value, we calculate the myofilament hydration, Hm, in fresh muscle to be 0.65 g H2O/g macromolecule. Only in membrane-damaged fibers, highly swollen by salt-rich media, was this significantly increased. Because our earlier NMR relaxation measurements indicate only 0.07 g H2O bound/g myofilament protein, we conclude that the "hydration" water measured by reduction of D/Do cannot be described by stationary layers of water molecules; instead, we propose that nonpolar groups on the proteins cause extensive, hydrophobically-induced interactions among a large fraction of solvent molecules, slowing their translational motion.  相似文献   

13.
A theory is presented on the solubility of proteins, in the hydrated as well as in the dry state, and in water as well as in organic solvents. To this effect, colloidal stability is assimilated with the solubility of the proteins, considered as hydrated entities. By means of a surface thermodynamic approach it can be shown that an increase in size of a hydrated protein must lead to insolubility, even in the absence of any change in a protein's surface properties. This can be substantiated experimentally by comparing the surface properties of immune complexes with those of their constituent immunoglobulins, as well as by comparing some of the properties of intact tobacco mosaic virus with those of its monomeric capsid subunits. Insolubilization of proteins by means of charge interactions as well as by dehydration is studied; an explanation is given of why precipitation caused by charge interactions is more likely to lead to partial irreversible denaturation than precipitation caused by protein-protein interactions brought about by partial dehydration (e.g., by salting-out). A link is established between the smallness (or even the negative value) of the interfacial tension between given proteins and various solvents and their solubility in these solvents. The energy of hydration of proteins can also be measured, and the differences between the free energies of interaction of dried and hydrated proteins with water point toward the additional processes underlying the solubilization, i.e., toward the conformational change of a protein in the process of becoming hydrated. The parameter of conformational change of a protein, while becoming hydrated, appears to be more closely linked to its degree of hydration than to its hydration energy.  相似文献   

14.
Knowledge-based potentials are extensively used to represent atomic interactions in modeling the protein structure. We consider a number of problems in constructing efficient knowledge-based potentials for biopolymer modeling. We show that some limitations can be overcome by normalizing estimated interactions through the distribution of distances between noninteracting random probes in protein structure space. We demonstrate that knowledge-based potentials thus constructed can be efficiently applied for analysis of the hydration state of proteins atoms. With this approach, one can predict the locations of structural water molecules in a protein globule. We have also succeeded in recognizing the correctly folded protein structure among many misfolded decoys in cases when the interaction with water solvent is dominant for structure formation.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of water on enzyme (protein) hydration and catalytic efficiency of enzyme molecules in organic solvents have been analyzed in terms of the thermodynamic activity of water, which has been estimated by the NRTL or UNIFAC equations. When the amount of water bound to the enzyme was plotted as a function of water activity, the water adsorption isotherms obtained from the water-solvent liquid mixtures were similar to the reported water-vapor adsorption isotherms of proteins. The water adsorption of proteins from the organic media was not significantly dependent on the properties of the solvents or the nature of the proteins. It is also shown that there is a linear relationship between the logarithm of the enzyme reaction rate and water activity. However, the dependence of the enzyme reaction rate on water activity was found to be different depending on the properties of the solvent. The relationship between water activity and other solvent parameters such as solvent hydrophobicity and the solubility of water in the solvent is also discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Water-protein interactions from high-resolution protein crystallography   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To understand the role of water in life at molecular and atomic levels, structures and interactions at the protein-water interface have been investigated by cryogenic X-ray crystallography. The method enabled a much clearer visualization of definite hydration sites on the protein surface than at ambient temperature. Using the structural models of proteins, including several hydration water molecules, the characteristics in hydration structures were systematically analysed for the amount, the interaction geometries between water molecules and proteins, and the local and global distribution of water molecules on the surface of proteins. The tetrahedral hydrogen-bond geometry of water molecules in bulk solvent was retained at the interface and enabled the extension of a three-dimensional chain connection of a hydrogen-bond network among hydration water molecules and polar protein atoms over the entire surface of proteins. Networks of hydrogen bonds were quite flexible to accommodate and/or to regulate the conformational changes of proteins such as domain motions. The present experimental results may have profound implications in the understanding of the physico-chemical principles governing the dynamics of proteins in an aqueous environment and a discussion of why water is essential to life at a molecular level.  相似文献   

17.
This report describes and documents the presence of multiple water-of-hydration fractions on proteins and in cells. Initial studies of hydration fractions in g of water/g of DM (dry mass) for tendon/collagen led to the development of the molecular SHM (stoichiometric hydration model) and the development of methods for calculating the size of hydration fractions on a number of different proteins of known amino acid composition. The water fractions have differences in molecular motion and other physical properties due to electrostatic interactions of polar water molecules with electric fields generated by covalently bound pairs of opposite partial charge on the protein backbone. The methods allow calculation of the size of four hydration fractions: single water bridges, double water bridges, dielectric water clusters over polar-hydrophilic surfaces and water clusters over hydrophobic surfaces. These four fractions provide monolayer water coverage. The predicted SHM hydration fractions match closely measured hydration fraction values for collagen and for globular proteins. This report also presents water sorption findings that support the SHM. The SHM is applicable for cell systems where it has been studied. In seven cell systems studied, more than half of all of the cell water had properties unlike those of bulk water. The SHM predicts and explains the commonly cited and measured bound water fraction of 0.2-0.4 g of water/g of DM on proteins. The commonly accepted concept that water beyond this bound water fraction can be considered bulk-like water in its physical properties is unwarranted.  相似文献   

18.
Published data for water adsorption by proteins suspended in organic solvents (of interest as enzyme reaction mixtures) have been converted to a basis of thermodynamic water activity (aw). The resulting adsorption isotherms have been compared with those known for proteins equilibrated with water from a gas phase. This comparison can show any effects of the solvent on the interaction between the protein and water at the molecular level. At lower water contents (aw less than about 0.4), similar adsorption isotherms are found in each solvent and in the gas phase; differences are probably less than the likely errors. Hence, it may be concluded that the presence of an organic solvent has little effect on the interaction between proteins and tightly bound water; on a molecular scale there is probably little penetration of the primary hydration layer by solvent molecules, even fairly polar ones such as EtOH. At higher aw values, there are differences between the isotherms which probably are significant. Nonpolar solvents increase the amount of water bound by the enzyme (at fixed aw), while polar solvents (mainly EtOH) may reduce the amount of water bound by the enzyme, presumably by occupying part of the secondary hydration layers in place of water.  相似文献   

19.
Protein-protein recognition regulates the vast majority of physiological or pathological processes. We investigated the role of hydration in collagen recognition by bacterial adhesin CNA by means of first principle molecular-dynamics samplings. Our characterization of the hydration properties of the isolated partners highlights dewetting-prone areas on the surface of CNA that closely match the key regions involved in hydrophobic intermolecular interactions upon complex formation, suggesting that the hydration state of the ligand-free CNA predisposes the protein to the collagen recognition. Moreover, hydration maps of the CNA-collagen complex reveal the presence of a number of structured water molecules that mediate intermolecular interactions at the interface between the two proteins. These hydration sites feature long residence times, significant binding free energies, and a geometrical distribution that closely resembles the hydration pattern of the isolated collagen triple helix. These findings are striking evidence that CNA recognizes the collagen triple helix as a hydrated molecule. For this structural motif, the exposure of several unsatisfied backbone carbonyl groups results in a strong interplay with the solvent, which is shown to also play a role in collagen recognition.  相似文献   

20.
We summarize the results of several of our recent studies on the dielectric properties of protein solutions, tissues, and nonionic microemulsions at microwave frequencies extending to 18 GHz. The data in all cases are analyzed using the Maxwell mixture theory to determine the dielectric properties of the suspending water and the amount and dielectric properties of the water of hydration associated with the suspended phase. The dielectric data from the protein solutions and tissues are broadly consistent with the results of previous studies at UHF frequencies; they indicate hydration values in the range of 0.4–0.6 g water/g protein. There is evidence of a dielectric relaxation process occurring at low-GHz frequencies that can be attributed in part to dielectric relaxation of the “bound” water in the system. The remaining solvent water appears to have dielectric properties close to, if not precisely the same as, those of pure water. The average relaxation frequency of the suspending water in the microemulsions is reduced from that of pure water, evidently reflecting an average of that of the water of hydration (~5–6 GHz) and that of pure water. This reduced average relaxation frequency implies an increased average viscosity of the water and (by Walden's rule) accounts for the unexpectedly low ionic conductivity of the preparations.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号