Back to Search
Start Over
Weakly-bound Dimers that Underlie the Crystal Nucleation Precursors in Lysozyme Solutions
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Protein crystallization is central to understanding of molecular structure in biology, a vital part of processes in the pharmaceutical industry, and a crucial component of numerous disease pathologies. Crystallization starts with nucleation and how nucleation proceeds determines the crystallization rate and essential properties of the resulting crystal population. Recent results with several proteins indicate that crystals nucleate within preformed mesoscopic protein-rich clusters. The origin of the mesoscopic clusters is poorly understood. In the case of lysozyme, a common model of protein biophysics, earlier findings suggest that clusters exist owing to the dynamics of formation and decay of weakly-bound transient dimers. Here we present evidence of a weakly bound lysozyme dimer in solutions of this protein. We employ two electrospray mass spectrometry techniques, a combined ion mobility separation mass spectrometry and a high-resolution implementation. To enhance the weak but statistically-significant dimer signal we develop a method based on the residuals between the maxima of the isotope peaks in Fourier space and their Gaussian envelope. We demonstrate that these procedures sensitively detect the presence of a non-covalently bound dimer and distinguish its signal from other polypeptides, noise, and sampling artefacts. These findings contribute essential elements of the crystal nucleation mechanism of lysozyme and other proteins and suggest pathways to control nucleation and crystallization by enhancing or suppressing weak oligomerization.
- Subjects :
- 0303 health sciences
education.field_of_study
Quantitative Biology::Biomolecules
Chemistry
Dimer
Population
Nucleation
010402 general chemistry
01 natural sciences
0104 chemical sciences
law.invention
Crystal
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
law
Chemical physics
Molecule
Crystallization
Lysozyme
education
Protein crystallization
030304 developmental biology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3d0b8a7a4597eaf41a96ba27ecf7e93f
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1101/275222