1gfg Citations

Positive contribution of hydration structure on the surface of human lysozyme to the conformational stability.

J Biol Chem 277 21792-800 (2002)
Related entries: 1gf8, 1gf9, 1gfa, 1gfe, 1gfh, 1gfj, 1gfk, 1gfr, 1gft, 1gfu, 1gfv, 1inu

Cited: 7 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 11927576

Abstract

Water molecules make a hydration structure with the network of hydrogen bonds, covering on the surface of proteins. To quantitatively estimate the contribution of the hydration structure to protein stability, a series of hydrophilic mutant human lysozymes (Val to Ser, Tyr, Asp, Asn, and Arg) modified at three different positions on the surface, which are located in the alpha-helix (Val-110), the beta-sheet (Val-2), and the loop (Val-74), were constructed. Their thermodynamic parameters of denaturation and crystal structures were examined by calorimetry and by x-ray crystallography at 100 K, respectively. The introduced polar residues made hydrogen bonds with protein atoms and/or water molecules, sometimes changing the hydration structure around the mutation site. Changes in the stability of the mutant proteins can be evaluated by a unique equation that considers the conformational changes resulting from the substitutions. Using this analysis, the relationship between the changes in the stabilities and the hydration structures for mutant human lysozymes substituted on the surface could be quantitatively estimated. The analysis indicated that the hydration structure on protein surface plays an important role in determining the conformational stability of the protein.

Reviews citing this publication (1)

  1. Role of Na+ and K+ in enzyme function. Page MJ, Di Cera E. Physiol Rev 86 1049-1092 (2006)

Articles citing this publication (6)

  1. Computational tools help improve protein stability but with a solubility tradeoff. Broom A, Jacobi Z, Trainor K, Meiering EM. J Biol Chem 292 14349-14361 (2017)
  2. Buried water molecules contribute to the conformational stability of a protein. Takano K, Yamagata Y, Yutani K. Protein Eng 16 5-9 (2003)
  3. Four-body scoring function for mutagenesis. Deutsch C, Krishnamoorthy B. Bioinformatics 23 3009-3015 (2007)
  4. Structural and dynamic features of the MutT protein in the recognition of nucleotides with the mutagenic 8-oxoguanine base. Nakamura T, Meshitsuka S, Kitagawa S, Abe N, Yamada J, Ishino T, Nakano H, Tsuzuki T, Doi T, Kobayashi Y, Fujii S, Sekiguchi M, Yamagata Y. J Biol Chem 285 444-452 (2010)
  5. Prediction of protein mutant stability using classification and regression tool. Huang LT, Saraboji K, Ho SY, Hwang SF, Ponnuswamy MN, Gromiha MM. Biophys Chem 125 462-470 (2007)
  6. Revisiting "reverse hydrophobic effect": applicable only to coil mutations at the surface. Gromiha MM. Biopolymers 91 591-599 (2009)


Related citations provided by authors (1)