Abstract: | The hydrogen–deuterium exchange reaction for the tryptophan residues in lysozyme have been followed in 4.5M LiBr at pH 7.2 in the temperature range of the unfolding transition by measuring the transmittance change at 293 nm. The exchange reaction proceeded in three phases at low temperature for native protein. The first and the second phases were ascribed to the H-D exchange reactions of three relatively exposed tryptophan residues on the molecular surface. The third phase corresponded to the H-D exchange reaction of the three tryptophan residues buried in the interior of the molecule. The H-D exchange reaction proceeded in two phases near the melting temperature and in a single phase at high temperature, where almost all molecules are unfolded. The H-D exchange of three tryptophan residues buried in folded molecules was caused by fluctuation between the folded and unfolded structure of the protein molecule. The rates of such a fluctuation were determined from the rates of the exchange reaction at various temperatures. These rates agreed very well with those determined from the temperature-jump method. This means that a protein molecule in solution fluctuates between the N- and D-states at every temperature within the transition region, where the N-form is the tightly folded native structure and the D-form the randomly coiled chain. From measurements of thermal unfolding of ester-108-lysozyme and the binding constant of (NAG)3 to ester-108-lysozyme, it was found that almost all cross-linked molecules are in the folded state near 50°C and pH 7.2 in 4.5M LiBr, where intact molecules are unfolded. We also studied the H-D exchange reaction of ester-108-lysozyme. In the temperature region of 43–50°C, about 70% of the exchangeable tryptophan residues of ester-108-lysozyme were exchanged within 1 s immediately after the mixing of D2O, in spite of the fact that almost all molecules are in the folded state. This was considered the premelting of the surface of a corss-linked molecule. |