A molecular mechanism for osmolyte-induced protein stability
Johns Hopkins University · Washington University in St. Louis · +1 more institution
Abstract
Osmolytes are small organic compounds that affect protein stability and are ubiquitous in living systems. In the equilibrium protein folding reaction, unfolded (U) native (N), protecting osmolytes push the equilibrium toward N, whereas denaturing osmolytes push the equilibrium toward U. As yet, there is no universal molecular theory that can explain the mechanism by which osmolytes interact with the protein to affect protein stability. Here, we lay the groundwork for such a theory, starting with a key observation: the transfer free energy of protein backbone from water to a water/osmolyte solution, Deltagtr, is negatively correlated with an osmolyte's fractional polar surface area. Deltagtr measures the degree…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.04
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Osmolyte
- Chemistry
- Solvation
- Accessible surface area
- Protein folding
- Interaction energy
- Protein–protein interaction
- Biophysics