The epistructural tension of a soluble protein is defined as the reversible work per unit area required to span the interfacial solvent envelope of the protein structure. It includes an entropic penalty term to account for losses in hydrogen-bonding coordination of interfacial water and is determined by a scalar field that indicates the expected coordination of a test water molecule at any given spatial location. An exhaustive analysis of structure-reported monomeric proteins reveals that disulfide bridges required to maintain structural integrity provide the thermodynamic counterbalance to the epistructural tension, yielding a tight linear correlation. Accordingly, deviations from the balance law correlate with the thermal denaturation free energies of proteins under reducing conditions. The picomolar-affinity toxin HsTX1 has the highest epistructural tension, while the metastable cellular form of the human prion protein PrP C represents the least tension-balanced protein. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.
CITATION STYLE
Fernández, A. (2012). Communication: Epistructural thermodynamics of soluble proteins. Journal of Chemical Physics, 136(9). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3691890
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.