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DG of unfolding of monomers by urea

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Questions: What is the function for the dissociated fraction a? ... The reason is clear: dilute dimers can dissociate and unfold more easily. 27 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DG of unfolding of monomers by urea


1
  • DG of unfolding of monomers by urea
  • DG of dissociation/unfolding of dimers by GnHCl
  • Denaturation examples of asparaginase.

2
  • DG of denaturation of cytochrome c by urea
  • Biochemistry, 2003, 42, 14606-13,
    Chattopadyay et al.
  • In many stability analyses people are looking for
    folding intermediates or other partially stable
    states.
  • Here the authors detect two folding intermediates
    of cytochrome c, when the protein is treated with
    SDS (sodium dodecylsulfate).
  • In the simple case of urea as denaturant no
    folding intermediates of cytochrome c were
    detected.

3
  • DG of denaturation of cytochrome c by urea

with urea
4
  • Goal DG of denaturation
  • Measurements and prediction ellipticity
    dependent on the concentration of urea
    (denaturant)
  • Assumption The denaturation/renaturation step is
    is reversible. DGD depends linearly on urea.
  • Unknown parameters ellipticity of the native and
    denatured state, half point of denaturation,
    cooperativity steepness of denaturation curve

5
  • Equations
  • Two state equilibrium
  • c concentration of urea
  • Conservation of mass
  • Ellipticity is additive

(1)
(2)
(3)
6
  • Equations
  • Concentration of the denatured species (eliminate
    nat from (1) and (2)
  • Ellipticity is proportional to the concentration

(4)
(5a)
(5b)
7
  • Ellipticity as function of the denaturant
    concentration
  • (5) and (2) in (3)
  • (4) in (6)

(6)


(7)
(8)
Qnat, Qden ellipticity if all protein is native
/ denatured
8
  • We still need to get DG information from the fits
    above.
  • Equations DG is linearly dependent on urea
  • with

(9)

(10)
9
  • Write Kd as function of c

(11)

10

11
  • The midpoint of transition can be reproduced well
    (fit 7,1 M, reported 7,2 M).
  • DG(H2O) is fitted to 50 kJ/mol, but reported as
    34 kJ/mol.


12
  • DG of dissociation/unfolding of dimers by GnHCl
  • Biochemistry, 2003, 42, 14831-7, Moreau et
    al.
  • Here, denaturation of a dimer, triosephosphate
    isomerase, is analyzed. Since the association
    reaction is bimolecular, the equilibrium is
    concentration dependent. Nevertheless, the
    observed dependence deviates from the expected
    dependence. Supported by further experiments,
    this can be explained by two very slowly
    interconverting native states.

13
  • The denaturation curve has to be predicted
    theoretically in order to observe deviations from
    the simple two state model.
  • Questions What is the function for the
    dissociated fraction a?
  • How does this curve depend on protein?

14
0.12 mM TIM
1.2 mM TIM
15
  • Goal DG of denaturation, dependence on protein
    concentration
  • Measurements fluorescence (spectra) at different
    concentrations of GdnHCl (denaturant) and two
    protein concentrations
  • Graph Fraction a of denatured protein as
    function of GdnHCl . This is calculated from the
    position of the emission maxima.
  • Assumption emission peak position behaves as a
    weighted average

16
  • Prediction a as function of GdnHCl .
  • Assumption The denaturation/renaturation step is
    reversible, DG is linearly dependent on GdnHCl
    concentration
  • Unknown parameters relative fluorescence
    intensity of the native and denatured state, half
    point of denaturation, cooperativity

17
  • The calculation is done in two steps.
  • First the fraction a(c) of denatured protein is
    calculated from experimental data.
  • Second, a(c) is used to obtain DG.



18
  • The observed parameter for denaturation is the
    wavelength lG (dependent on GdnHCl) of the
    fluorescence emission peak.
  • For symmetrical peaks lG is the peak maximum.
  • For complicated peaks an intensity-weighted
    emission maximum is used for lG



Il
l
19
  • Determination of a
  • If fraction a of the protein is denatured
    (unfolded), the two emission peaks of the native
    and denatured protein overlay. The observed
    wavelength lG of the emission peak is the
    weighted average of the native and denatured
    peaks (lN and lU).



lU
lG
lN
20
  • In the first example the maximum is shifted a
    bit, but in the second, what is the observed
    maximum?



21
  • The observed wavelength (lav) can be calculated
    as weighted average from the fraction a, lN, and
    lU.



(1)
I total intensity of a peak f fraction of
native/denatured protein
22
  • The fraction f of native and denatured protein
    can be expressed in as
  • Use these fs ((2) in (1))
  • And resolve a

(2)


(3)
(4)
23
  • The experimental data can now be used to
    calculate the as for the following graph



24
  • Now, we need to find the equation how a depends
    on c, the GdnHCl concentration.
  • Definition of a
  • NB some authors also use a as the fraction of
    native protein.
  • The following equations differ, whether the
    native state is a monomer or dimer (or ...)



25
  • Monomers Dimers

26
  • Monomers Dimers
  • An important difference is, that the stability
    (DG) is independent of the protein concentration
    (tot) for monomers, but dependent for dimers!
  • The reason is clear dilute dimers can dissociate
    and unfold more easily.

27
  • Monomers
  • A similar equation is used for dimers, but c0 and
    f are more complicated.

28
  • How does the protein concentration influence the
    curves?
  • The effect is most easily calculated for the
    midpoint of denaturation





29
  • The calculated shift of c1/2 is 0.19 M, but only
    a shift of 0.08 M is observed

30
  • Result One of the assumptions must be wrong.
  • Further experiments show, that there are (at
    least) two native states, that interconvert very
    slowly. These two states show different
    denaturation behavior. In samples treated with
    0.6 M GdnHCl these two states can be separated on
    a gel filtration column. They show different
    denaturation kinetics. Nevertheless, they have
    identical covalent structures. Hence, they are
    stable discernable conformers.

31
  • Notes on additional aspects of denaturation
    curves (C. Derst, Asparaginase from E. coli)

1. Non-constant fluorescence intensity as
observed parameter
32
  • The upper and lower plateaus are not constants,
    but themself linear functions of c.

then expands to
33
DGs based on these values are very sensitive to
experimental errors!
DG (kJ/mol) m Literature 35.00.7 44.3
1.1 Calc 36.3 47.7
34
2. Remaining enzymatic activity dependent on
temperature instead of a denaturant
35
The basic form of the equation is the same,
because DG is linear in T, if DH and DS are
assumed constant within the observed temperature
range With no activity of the denatured state,
the familiar changes to
36
Temperature dependent measurements thus allow
determination of DG, DH and DS.
58.2C
58.4C
DG(25C)67.3 kJ/mol, DH672 kJ/mol
DG(25C)53.0 kJ/mol, DH809 kJ/mol
37
Averages and weighted averages Take a sample of
values vi 3.2, 3.5, 3.5, 4.0, 4.0, 4.0, 4.4 The
average v can be calculated for 7 values
(n7) or for 4 groups (n4) of values with
various occurrencies hi In a more general
case weights w(v) are used, that dont need to be
integer
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