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Contribution of Hydrophobic Interactions to Protein Stability

Authors :
Hailong Fu
J. Martin Scholtz
Bret A. Shirley
John Landua
Saul R. Trevino
Marsha McNutt Hendricks
Gerald R. Grimsley
Katrina Lee Fryar
Satoshi Iimura
C. Nick Pace
Ketan S. Gajiwala
Source :
Journal of Molecular Biology. 408:514-528
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Our goal was to gain a better understanding of the contribution of hydrophobic interactions to protein stability. We measured the change in conformational stability, Δ(ΔG), for hydrophobic mutants of four proteins: villin headpiece subdomain (VHP) with 36 residues, a surface protein from Borrelia burgdorferi (VlsE) with 341 residues, and two proteins previously studied in our laboratory, ribonucleases Sa and T1. We compared our results with those of previous studies and reached the following conclusions: (1) Hydrophobic interactions contribute less to the stability of a small protein, VHP (0.6±0.3 kcal/mol per -CH(2)- group), than to the stability of a large protein, VlsE (1.6±0.3 kcal/mol per -CH(2)- group). (2) Hydrophobic interactions make the major contribution to the stability of VHP (40 kcal/mol) and the major contributors are (in kilocalories per mole) Phe18 (3.9), Met13 (3.1), Phe7 (2.9), Phe11 (2.7), and Leu21 (2.7). (3) Based on the Δ(ΔG) values for 148 hydrophobic mutants in 13 proteins, burying a -CH(2)- group on folding contributes, on average, 1.1±0.5 kcal/mol to protein stability. (4) The experimental Δ(ΔG) values for aliphatic side chains (Ala, Val, Ile, and Leu) are in good agreement with their ΔG(tr) values from water to cyclohexane. (5) For 22 proteins with 36 to 534 residues, hydrophobic interactions contribute 60±4% and hydrogen bonds contribute 40±4% to protein stability. (6) Conformational entropy contributes about 2.4 kcal/mol per residue to protein instability. The globular conformation of proteins is stabilized predominantly by hydrophobic interactions.

Details

ISSN :
00222836
Volume :
408
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1062f4963b9c6e2b650b279cce36c197
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2011.02.053