| Literature DB >> 7139028 |
M E Clark, E E Burnell, N R Chapman, J A Hinke.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1982 PMID: 7139028 PMCID: PMC1328946 DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(82)84519-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys J ISSN: 0006-3495 Impact factor: 4.033