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Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes

[Image: see text] Using osmolyte cosolvents, we show that hydrogen-bonding contributions can be separated from hydrophobic interactions in the denatured state ensemble (DSE). Specifically, the effects of urea and the protecting osmolytes sarcosine and TMAO are reported on the thermally unfolded DSE...

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Autores principales: Holthauzen, Luis Marcelo F., Rösgen, Jörg, Bolen, D. Wayne
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2010
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2817916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20073511
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi9015499
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author Holthauzen, Luis Marcelo F.
Rösgen, Jörg
Bolen, D. Wayne
author_facet Holthauzen, Luis Marcelo F.
Rösgen, Jörg
Bolen, D. Wayne
author_sort Holthauzen, Luis Marcelo F.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Using osmolyte cosolvents, we show that hydrogen-bonding contributions can be separated from hydrophobic interactions in the denatured state ensemble (DSE). Specifically, the effects of urea and the protecting osmolytes sarcosine and TMAO are reported on the thermally unfolded DSE of Nank4−7*, a truncated notch ankyrin protein. The high thermal energy of this state in the presence and absence of 6 M urea or 1 M sarcosine solution is sufficient to allow large changes in the hydrodynamic radius (R(h)) and secondary structure accretion without populating the native state. The CD change at 228 nm is proportional to the inverse of the volume of the DSE, giving a compact species equivalent to a premolten globule in 1 M sarcosine. The same general effects portraying hierarchical folding observed in the DSE at 55 °C are also often seen at room temperature. Analysis of Nank4−7* DSE structural energetics at room temperature as a function of solvent provides rationale for understanding the structural and dimensional effects in terms of how modulation of the solvent alters solvent quality for the peptide backbone. Results show that while the strength of hydrophobic interactions changes little on transferring the DSE from 6 M urea to water and then to 1 M TMAO, backbone−backbone (hydrogen-bonding) interactions are greatly enhanced due to progressively poorer solvent quality for the peptide backbone. Thus, increased intrachain hydrogen bonding guides secondary structure accretion and DSE contraction as solvent quality is decreased. This process is accompanied by increasing hydrophobic contacts as chain contraction gathers hydrophobes into proximity and the declining urea−backbone free energy gradient reaches urea concentrations that are energetically insufficient to keep hydrophobes apart in the DSE.
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spelling pubmed-28179162010-02-09 Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes Holthauzen, Luis Marcelo F. Rösgen, Jörg Bolen, D. Wayne Biochemistry [Image: see text] Using osmolyte cosolvents, we show that hydrogen-bonding contributions can be separated from hydrophobic interactions in the denatured state ensemble (DSE). Specifically, the effects of urea and the protecting osmolytes sarcosine and TMAO are reported on the thermally unfolded DSE of Nank4−7*, a truncated notch ankyrin protein. The high thermal energy of this state in the presence and absence of 6 M urea or 1 M sarcosine solution is sufficient to allow large changes in the hydrodynamic radius (R(h)) and secondary structure accretion without populating the native state. The CD change at 228 nm is proportional to the inverse of the volume of the DSE, giving a compact species equivalent to a premolten globule in 1 M sarcosine. The same general effects portraying hierarchical folding observed in the DSE at 55 °C are also often seen at room temperature. Analysis of Nank4−7* DSE structural energetics at room temperature as a function of solvent provides rationale for understanding the structural and dimensional effects in terms of how modulation of the solvent alters solvent quality for the peptide backbone. Results show that while the strength of hydrophobic interactions changes little on transferring the DSE from 6 M urea to water and then to 1 M TMAO, backbone−backbone (hydrogen-bonding) interactions are greatly enhanced due to progressively poorer solvent quality for the peptide backbone. Thus, increased intrachain hydrogen bonding guides secondary structure accretion and DSE contraction as solvent quality is decreased. This process is accompanied by increasing hydrophobic contacts as chain contraction gathers hydrophobes into proximity and the declining urea−backbone free energy gradient reaches urea concentrations that are energetically insufficient to keep hydrophobes apart in the DSE. American Chemical Society 2010-01-14 2010-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2817916/ /pubmed/20073511 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi9015499 Text en Copyright © 2010 American Chemical Society http://pubs.acs.org This is an open-access article distributed under the ACS AuthorChoice Terms & Conditions. Any use of this article, must conform to the terms of that license which are available at http://pubs.acs.org.
spellingShingle Holthauzen, Luis Marcelo F.
Rösgen, Jörg
Bolen, D. Wayne
Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes
title Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes
title_full Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes
title_fullStr Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes
title_full_unstemmed Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes
title_short Hydrogen Bonding Progressively Strengthens upon Transfer of the Protein Urea-Denatured State to Water and Protecting Osmolytes
title_sort hydrogen bonding progressively strengthens upon transfer of the protein urea-denatured state to water and protecting osmolytes
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2817916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20073511
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi9015499
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