Literature DB >> 1445858

Temperature and guanidine hydrochloride dependence of the structural stability of ribonuclease T1.

I M Plaza del Pino1, C N Pace, E Freire.   

Abstract

The thermal unfolding of ribonuclease T1 has been studied by high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry as a function of temperature, [GuHCl], and scanning rate. The destabilizing effect of GuHCl has revealed that the kinetics of the unfolding transition become extremely slow as the transition temperature decreases. At pH 5.3 and zero GuHCl, the unfolding transition is centered at 59.1 degrees C; upon increasing the GuHCl concentration, the transition occurs at lower temperatures and exhibits progressively slower kinetics; so, for example, at 3 M GuHCl, the transition temperature is 40.6 degrees C and is characterized by a time constant close to 10 min. Under all conditions studied (pH 5.3, pH 7.0, [GuHCl] < 3 M), the transition is thermodynamically reversible. The slow kinetics of the transition induce significant distortions in the shape of the transition profiles that can be mistakenly interpreted as deviations from a two-state mechanism. Determination of the thermodynamic parameters from the calorimetric data has required the development of an analytical formalism that explicitly includes the thermodynamics as well as the kinetics of the transition. Using this formalism, it is shown that a two-state slow-kinetics model is capable of accurately describing the structural stability of ribonuclease T1 as a function of temperature, GuHCl concentration, and scanning rate. Multidimensional analysis of the calorimetric data has been used to estimate the intrinsic thermodynamic parameters for protein stability, the interaction parameters with GuHCl, and the time constant for the unfolding transition and its temperature dependence.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1445858     DOI: 10.1021/bi00160a033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  8 in total

1.  The paradox between m values and deltaCp's for denaturation of ribonuclease T1 with disulfide bonds intact and broken.

Authors:  I V Baskakov; D W Bolen
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  1999-06       Impact factor: 6.725

2.  Thermal stability of hydrophobic heme pocket variants of oxidized cytochrome c.

Authors:  J R Liggins; T P Lo; G D Brayer; B T Nall
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 6.725

3.  Ligand binding analysis and screening by chemical denaturation shift.

Authors:  Arne Schön; Richard K Brown; Burleigh M Hutchins; Ernesto Freire
Journal:  Anal Biochem       Date:  2013-08-29       Impact factor: 3.365

4.  Protein phase diagrams II: nonideal behavior of biochemical reactions in the presence of osmolytes.

Authors:  Allan Chris M Ferreon; Josephine C Ferreon; D Wayne Bolen; Jörg Rösgen
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2006-10-06       Impact factor: 4.033

5.  Scan-rate dependence in protein calorimetry: the reversible transitions of Bacillus circulans xylanase and a disulfide-bridge mutant.

Authors:  J Davoodi; W W Wakarchuk; W K Surewicz; P R Carey
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  1998-07       Impact factor: 6.725

Review 6.  Chemical denaturation as a tool in the formulation optimization of biologics.

Authors:  Ernesto Freire; Arne Schön; Burleigh M Hutchins; Richard K Brown
Journal:  Drug Discov Today       Date:  2013-06-21       Impact factor: 7.851

7.  Energetics of hydrogen bonding in proteins: a model compound study.

Authors:  S M Habermann; K P Murphy
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 6.725

8.  Highly anomalous energetics of protein cold denaturation linked to folding-unfolding kinetics.

Authors:  M Luisa Romero-Romero; Alvaro Inglés-Prieto; Beatriz Ibarra-Molero; Jose M Sanchez-Ruiz
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-07-29       Impact factor: 3.240

  8 in total

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