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An equilibrium statistical-thermodynamic model for the effect of volume exclusion arising from high concentrations of stable macromolecules upon the stability of a trace globular protein with respect to denaturation by heat and by chaotropes is presented. The stable cosolute and the native form of the trace protein are modeled by effective hard spherical particles. The denatured state of the trace protein is represented as an ensemble of substates modeled by random coils having the same contour length but different rms end-to-end distances (i.e., different degrees of compaction). The excess or nonideal chemical potential of the native state and of each denatured substate is calculated as a function of the concentration of stable cosolute, leading to an estimate of the relative abundance of each state and substate, and the ensemble average free energy of the transition between native and denatured protein. The effect of the addition of stable cosolute upon the temperature of half-denaturation and upon the concentration of chaotrope required to half-denature the tracer at constant temperature is then estimated. At high cosolute concentration (>100 g/l) these effects are predicted to be large and readily measurable experimentally, provided that an experimental system exhibiting a fully reversible unfolding equilibrium at high total macromolecular concentration can be developed.

作者:A P, Minton

来源:Biophysical journal 2000 年 78卷 1期

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作者:
A P, Minton
来源:
Biophysical journal 2000 年 78卷 1期
An equilibrium statistical-thermodynamic model for the effect of volume exclusion arising from high concentrations of stable macromolecules upon the stability of a trace globular protein with respect to denaturation by heat and by chaotropes is presented. The stable cosolute and the native form of the trace protein are modeled by effective hard spherical particles. The denatured state of the trace protein is represented as an ensemble of substates modeled by random coils having the same contour length but different rms end-to-end distances (i.e., different degrees of compaction). The excess or nonideal chemical potential of the native state and of each denatured substate is calculated as a function of the concentration of stable cosolute, leading to an estimate of the relative abundance of each state and substate, and the ensemble average free energy of the transition between native and denatured protein. The effect of the addition of stable cosolute upon the temperature of half-denaturation and upon the concentration of chaotrope required to half-denature the tracer at constant temperature is then estimated. At high cosolute concentration (>100 g/l) these effects are predicted to be large and readily measurable experimentally, provided that an experimental system exhibiting a fully reversible unfolding equilibrium at high total macromolecular concentration can be developed.