Average protein density is a molecular‐weight‐dependent function
Universidade de São Paulo · GTx (United States)
Abstract
The mass density of proteins is a relevant basic biophysical quantity. It is also a useful input parameter, for example, for three-dimensional structure determination by protein crystallography and studies of protein oligomers in solution by analytic ultracentrifugation. We have performed a critical analysis of published, theoretical, and experimental investigations about this issue and concluded that the average density of proteins is not a constant as often assumed. For proteins with a molecular weight below 20 kDa, the average density exhibits a positive deviation that increases for decreasing molecular weight. A simple molecular-weight-depending function is proposed that provides a more accurate estimate…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 4.48
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 16
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Function (biology)
- Constant (computer programming)
- Chemistry
- Molecular mass
- Ultracentrifuge
- Analytical Ultracentrifugation
- Protein structure
- Thermodynamics