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Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of the surface free energy perturbation to protein-solvent interactions

TLDR
A correlation was found for both BSA and lysozyme in KAsp, NaGlu, LysHCl, ArgGlu and LysGlu between the surface tension effect and the observed preferential interactions, indicating that the change in the surface free energy of the protein-containing cavity due to thesurface tension increase for water by these amino acid salts contributes dominantly to the observed increase in the chemical potential of theprotein by their addition.
Abstract
Surface tension measurements were carried out at 20 degrees C by a capillary drop-weight method on aqueous solutions of sodium glutamate (NaGlu), lysine hydrochloride (LysHCl), potassium aspartate (KAsp), arginine hydrochloride (ArgHCl), lysylglutamate (LysGlu), argininylglutamate (ArgGlu), guanidinium sulfate, trehalose, trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), dimethyl sulfoxide, 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (hexylene glycol), and poly(ethylene glycol)s of molecular weights 200, 400, 600, and 1000. All of the salts and the sugar increased the surface tension of water, while the last four compounds decreased it, with 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol lowering it most effectively and TMAO being the least effective. The preferential hydration of bovine serum albumin (BSA) and lysozyme was measured in KAsp, ArgHCl, LysGlu, and ArgGlu. The high values of preferential hydration found in all cases, except for BSA in ArgHCl, suggest that they should stabilize protein structure, as had been found for lysine hydrochloride and monosodium glutamate [Arakawa, T., & Timasheff, S. N. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4979-4986]. A correlation was found for both BSA and lysozyme in KAsp, NaGlu, LysHCl, ArgGlu, and LysGlu between the surface tension effect and the observed preferential interactions, indicating that the change in the surface free energy of the protein-containing cavity due to the surface tension increase for water by these amino acid salts contributes dominantly to the observed increase in the chemical potential of the protein by their addition. The lack of a correlation observed for BSA, but not lysozyme, in ArgHCl at low concentrations where preferential binding is close to zero suggests, however, that the surface tension effect is not the sole factor involved in the protein-solvent interactions in these amino acid salts. Binding of ArgHCl to BSA, probably through hydrogen bonds between the Arg guanidinium group and peptide bonds, was proposed to occur, the affinity of Arg+ being reduced by electrostatic repulsion when proteins carry a net positive charge, such as is the case with lysozyme. Since the four organic solvent additives also lead to protein preferential hydration, no correlation exists between their preferential interactions and the surface free energy perturbation. Therefore, in their case, the preferential hydration must be ascribed to other factors that overcome the preferential binding expected from the Gibbs adsorption isotherm. The surface tension results, however, are consistent with the binding of the organic solvents to proteins through hydrophobic interactions, explaining, at least in part, the observed concentration dependence of the interactions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Instability, stabilization, and formulation of liquid protein pharmaceuticals.

TL;DR: The basic behavior of proteins, their instabilities, and stabilization in aqueous state in relation to the development of liquid protein pharmaceuticals is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability of Protein Pharmaceuticals: An Update

TL;DR: This review summarizes the advances that have been made since then regarding protein stabilization and formulation and discusses the current understanding of chemical and physical instability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Is Trehalose an Exceptional Protein Stabilizer? AN ANALYSIS OF THE THERMAL STABILITY OF PROTEINS IN THE PRESENCE OF THE COMPATIBLE OSMOLYTE TREHALOSE

TL;DR: The pH dependence data suggest that even though the charge status of a protein contributes significantly, trehalose can be expected to work as a universal stabilizer of protein conformation due to its exceptional effect on the structure and properties of solvent water compared with other sugars and polyols.
Journal ArticleDOI

Suppression of protein interactions by arginine: a proposed mechanism of the arginine effects.

TL;DR: While arginine increases the surface tension of water, it favorably interacts with most amino acid side chains and the peptide bonds, a property shared with GdnHCl.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protein folding and association: insights from the interfacial and thermodynamic properties of hydrocarbons.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated in this work that the surface tension, water‐organic solvent, transfer‐free energies and the thermodynamics of melting of linear alkanes provide fundamental insights into the nonpolar driving forces for protein folding and protein binding reactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Solubility of Amino Acids and Two Glycine Peptides in Aqueous Ethanol and Dioxane Solutions ESTABLISHMENT OF A HYDROPHOBICITY SCALE

TL;DR: In this article, the free energies of transfer of amino acid side chains and backbone peptide units from water to ethanol and dioxane solutions have been calculated from these data and the results show the similarity between the effects of ethanol and Dioxane on the stability of those side chains.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of protein stabilization by glycerol: preferential hydration in glycerol-water mixtures

Kunihiko Gekko, +1 more
- 04 Aug 1981 - 
TL;DR: A densimetric investigation of the interactions between solvent components in glycerol-water mixtures and seven proteins and all the proteins were found to be preferentially hydrated at all conditions used, i.e., addition of the proteins to the mixed solvent results in an increase in the chemical potential of Glycerol.
Journal ArticleDOI

The stabilization of proteins by sucrose.

TL;DR: The results from theprotein-solvent interaction study indicate that sucrose is preferentially excluded from the protein domain, increasing the free energy of the system and leading to protein stabilization.
Book ChapterDOI

Hydration of Proteins and Polypeptides

TL;DR: The chapter presents several proposals for predicting protein hydration based on the amino acid composition of the protein; however, the two main questions concerned include—whether ionic groups are more hydrated than other polar groups, and whether the amide and peptide functions are hydrated or not.
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