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Thermodynamic Molecular Switch in Sequence-Specific Hydrophobic Interaction: Two Computational Models Compared
We have shown in our published work the existence of a thermodynamic switch in biological systems wherein a change of sign in ΔCp°(T)(reaction) leads to a true negative minimum in the Gibbs free energy change of reaction, and hence, a maximum in the related K(eq). We have examined 35 pair-wise, sequ...
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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TheScientificWorldJOURNAL
2003
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5974744/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12806129 http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.16 |
Sumario: | We have shown in our published work the existence of a thermodynamic switch in biological systems wherein a change of sign in ΔCp°(T)(reaction) leads to a true negative minimum in the Gibbs free energy change of reaction, and hence, a maximum in the related K(eq). We have examined 35 pair-wise, sequence-specific hydrophobic interactions over the temperature range of 273–333 K, based on data reported by Nemethy and Scheraga in 1962. A closer look at a single example, the pair-wise hydrophobic interaction of leucine-isoleucine, will demonstrate the significant differences when the data are analyzed using the Nemethy-Scheraga model or treated by the Planck-Benzinger methodology which we have developed. The change in inherent chemical bond energy at 0 K, ΔH°(T(0)) is 7.53 kcal mol compared with 2.4 kcal mol, while ‹t(s)› is 365 K as compared with 355 K, for the Nemethy-Scheraga and Planck-Benzinger model, respectively. At ‹t(m)›, the thermal agitation energy is about five times greater than ΔH°(T(0)) in the Planck-Benzinger model, that is 465 K compared to 497 K in the Nemethy-Scheraga model. The results imply that the negative Gibbs free energy minimum at a well-defined ‹t(s)›, where TΔS° = 0 at about 355 K, has its origin in the sequence-specific hydrophobic interactions, which are highly dependent on details of molecular structure. The Nemethy-Scheraga model shows no evidence of the thermodynamic molecular switch that we have found to be a universal feature of biological interactions. The Planck-Benzinger method is the best known for evaluating the innate temperature-invariant enthalpy, ΔH°(T(0)), and provides for better understanding of the heat of reaction for biological molecules. |
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