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      Correlation analysis for heat denaturation of Trp-cage miniprotein with explicit solvent : Heat Denaturation of Trp-Cage Miniprotein

      1 , 1 , 2 , 1 , 2
      Protein Science
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          <p id="d9736868e222">Energetics was analyzed for Trp‐cage miniprotein in water to elucidate the solvation effect in heat denaturation. The solvation free energy was computed for a set of protein structures at room and high temperatures with all‐atom molecular dynamics simulation combined with the solution theory in the energy representation, and its correlations were investigated against the intramolecular (structural) energy of the protein and the average interaction energy of the protein with the solvent water. It was observed both at room and high temperatures that the solvation free energy is anticorrelated to the structural energy and varies in parallel to the electrostatic component of the protein–water interaction energy without correlations to the van der Waals and excluded‐volume components. When the set of folded structures sampled at room temperature was compared with the set of unfolded ones at high temperature, it was found that the preference order of the two sets is in correspondence to the van der Waals and excluded‐volume components in the sum of the protein intramolecular and protein‐water intermolecular interactions and is not distinguished by the electrostatic component. </p>

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          Most cited references60

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          Designing a 20-residue protein.

          Truncation and mutation of a poorly folded 39-residue peptide has produced 20-residue constructs that are >95% folded in water at physiological pH. These constructs optimize a novel fold, designated as the 'Trp-cage' motif, and are significantly more stable than any other miniprotein reported to date. Folding is cooperative and hydrophobically driven by the encapsulation of a Trp side chain in a sheath of Pro rings. As the smallest protein-like construct, Trp-cage miniproteins should provide a testing ground for both experimental studies and computational simulations of protein folding and unfolding pathways. Pro Trp interactions may be a particularly effective strategy for the a priori design of self-folding peptides.
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            Method for estimating the configurational entropy of macromolecules

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              Temperature dependence of the hydrophobic interaction in protein folding.

              Accurate calorimetric data for the thermodynamics of transfer of six liquid hydrocarbons to water have been combined with solubility data to provide a model for the temperature dependence of the hydrophobic interaction in protein folding. The model applies at temperatures for which the change in heat capacity (delta Cp) is constant. The extrapolated value of the temperature (Ts) at which the entropy of transfer (delta S degrees) reaches zero is strikingly similar (Ts = 112.8 degrees C +/- 2.2 degrees C) for the six hydrocarbons. This finding provides an interpretation for the empirical relation discovered by Sturtevant: the ratio delta S degrees/delta Cp measured at 25 degrees C is constant for the transfer of nonpolar substances from nonaqueous media to water. Constancy of this ratio is equivalent to Ts = constant. When applied to protein folding, the hydrocarbon model gives estimates of the contributions of the hydrophobic interaction to the entropy and enthalpy changes on unfolding and, by difference, estimates of the residual contributions from other sources. The major share of the large enthalpy change observed on unfolding at high temperatures comes from the hydrophobic interaction. The hydrophobic interaction changes from being entropy-driven at 22 degrees C to being enthalpy-driven at 113 degrees C. Finally, the hydrocarbon model predicts that plots of the specific entropy change on unfolding versus temperature should nearly intersect close to 113 degrees C, as observed by Privalov.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Protein Science
                Protein Science
                Wiley
                09618368
                January 2016
                January 2016
                August 06 2015
                : 25
                : 1
                : 56-66
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Division of Chemical Engineering; Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University; Toyonaka Osaka 560-8531 Japan
                [2 ]Elements Strategy Initiative for Catalysts and Batteries; Kyoto University; Katsura Kyoto 615-8520 Japan
                Article
                10.1002/pro.2754
                4815324
                26189564
                374ae89a-08e3-4a63-8f05-ca1b6b26494f
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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