Issue 42, 2010

On the molecular origin of cold denaturation of globular proteins

Abstract

A polypeptide chain can adopt very different conformations, a fundamental distinguishing feature of which is the water accessible surface area, WASA, that is a measure of the layer around the polypeptide chain where the center of water molecules cannot physically enter, generating a solvent-excluded volume effect. The large WASA decrease associated with the folding of a globular protein leads to a large decrease in the solvent-excluded volume, and so to a large increase in the configurational/translational freedom of water molecules. The latter is a quantity that depends upon temperature. Simple calculations over the −30 to 150 °C temperature range, where liquid water can exist at 1 atm, show that such a gain decreases significantly on lowering the temperature below 0 °C, paralleling the decrease in liquid water density. There will be a temperature where the destabilizing contribution of the polypeptide chain conformational entropy exactly matches the stabilizing contribution of the water configurational/translational entropy, leading to cold denaturation.

Graphical abstract: On the molecular origin of cold denaturation of globular proteins

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Jun 2010
Accepted
01 Sep 2010
First published
30 Sep 2010

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010,12, 14245-14252

On the molecular origin of cold denaturation of globular proteins

G. Graziano, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 14245 DOI: 10.1039/C0CP00945H

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