Issue 25, 2011

Contrasting the denaturing effect of guanidinium chloride with the stabilizing effect of guanidinium sulfate

Abstract

Guanidinium chloride, GdmCl, is a strong denaturing agent of globular proteins, whereas guanidinium sulfate, Gdm2SO4, is a stabilizing agent of globular proteins. The stabilizing activity of Gdm2SO4 is unexpected because the denaturant capability of GdmCl is due to direct interactions of Gdm+ ions with protein surface groups. It is shown that the statistical thermodynamic approach devised to explain the molecular origin of cold denaturation [G. Graziano, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 14245–14252] can provide a rationalization of the different behaviour of GdmCl and Gdm2SO4 towards globular proteins. The fundamental quantity is the reversible work to create in the aqueous solution a cavity suitable to host the D-state and a cavity suitable to host the N-state. In aqueous GdmCl solutions, this contribution is not large enough to overwhelm the conformational entropy gain upon unfolding and the direct attractions between Gdm+ ions and protein surface groups; in aqueous Gdm2SO4 solutions, it is so large that it overwhelms the two destabilizing contributions. Sulfate ions, due to their high charge density, interact strongly with water molecules producing a number density increase, that, in turn, renders the cavity creation process very costly, reversing the denaturing power of Gdm+ ions and stabilizing the N-state of globular proteins.

Graphical abstract: Contrasting the denaturing effect of guanidinium chloride with the stabilizing effect of guanidinium sulfate

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Mar 2011
Accepted
06 May 2011
First published
27 May 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 12008-12014

Contrasting the denaturing effect of guanidinium chloride with the stabilizing effect of guanidinium sulfate

G. Graziano, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 12008 DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20843H

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