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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Quantifying why urea is a protein denaturant, whereas glycine betaine is a protein stabilizer.

TLDR
Urea m-values for protein folding and other protein processes are quantitatively interpreted and predicted using these urea interaction potentials or Kp values, which reveal that urea accumulates moderately at amide O and weakly at aliphatic C, whereas GB is excluded from both.
Abstract
To explain the large, opposite effects of urea and glycine betaine (GB) on stability of folded proteins and protein complexes, we quantify and interpret preferential interactions of urea with 45 model compounds displaying protein functional groups and compare with a previous analysis of GB. This information is needed to use urea as a probe of coupled folding in protein processes and to tune molecular dynamics force fields. Preferential interactions between urea and model compounds relative to their interactions with water are determined by osmometry or solubility and dissected using a unique coarse-grained analysis to obtain interaction potentials quantifying the interaction of urea with each significant type of protein surface (aliphatic, aromatic hydrocarbon (C); polar and charged N and O). Microscopic local-bulk partition coefficients Kp for the accumulation or exclusion of urea in the water of hydration of these surfaces relative to bulk water are obtained. Kp values reveal that urea accumulates moderately at amide O and weakly at aliphatic C, whereas GB is excluded from both. These results provide both thermodynamic and molecular explanations for the opposite effects of urea and glycine betaine on protein stability, as well as deductions about strengths of amide NH—amide O and amide NH—amide N hydrogen bonds relative to hydrogen bonds to water. Interestingly, urea, like GB, is moderately accumulated at aromatic C surface. Urea m-values for protein folding and other protein processes are quantitatively interpreted and predicted using these urea interaction potentials or Kp values.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant salt-tolerance mechanisms

TL;DR: The understanding of the core salt-tolerance mechanisms in plants is reviewed and key Na+ transport and detoxification pathways and the impact of epigenetic chromatin modifications on salinity tolerance are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the Hofmeister Series: Ion-Specific Effects on Proteins and Their Biological Functions

TL;DR: It is shown that the cationic and anionic Hofmeister series can now be rationalized primarily in terms of specific interactions of salt ions with the backbone and charged side chain groups at the protein surface in solution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cosolvent Effects on Protein Stability

TL;DR: The development of a model for TMAO is presented that is consistent with experimental observations and that provides physical insight into the role of cosolvent-cosolvent interaction in determining its preferential interaction with proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polymer collapse in miscible good solvents is a generic phenomenon driven by preferential adsorption

TL;DR: A simple and universal treatment that requires only the preferential interaction of one of the cosolvents with the polymer is presented, opening a new perspective towards an operational understanding of macromolecular solubility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microscopic insights into the protein-stabilizing effect of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO).

TL;DR: An infrared experiment designed to probe the microscopic details of this action explicitly from the perspective of the solute molecule reveals that the protein-stabilizing effect of TMAO originates from two contributions: One is entropic and the other is enthalpic in nature.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Protein Data Bank

TL;DR: The goals of the PDB are described, the systems in place for data deposition and access, how to obtain further information and plans for the future development of the resource are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Denaturant m values and heat capacity changes: relation to changes in accessible surface areas of protein unfolding.

TL;DR: Denaturant m values, the dependence of the free energy of unfolding on denaturant concentration, have been collected for a large set of proteins and correlate very strongly with the amount of protein surface exposed to solvent upon unfolding.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Hofmeister ion interactions affect protein stability.

TL;DR: Model compound studies in the literature show how Hofmeister ion interactions affect protein stability, and a general model, suitable for analyzing diverse ion-protein interactions, is provided by the two-domain model of Record and co-workers.
Journal ArticleDOI

A molecular mechanism for osmolyte-induced protein stability

TL;DR: A quantitative solvation model is constructed in which backbone/solvent interaction energy is a function of interactant polarity, and the number of energetically equivalent ways of realizing a given interaction is afunction of interactionant surface area.
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