Abstract
The denaturation process is
considered with particular reference to the application of N.M.R. spectroscopy
for its study. All known examples of exchange between native and unfolded
states are shown to be cases of slow exchange on the N.M.R. time scale. Furthermore,
providing the denaturation is two-state, the fraction of unfolded molecules
α can be obtained from measurements of the heights of various N.M.R.
resonances, including those which are composites of several closely related
types of protons. The experimentally measured parameter F does not equal α
if intermediates are present or in the very unlikely event of the denaturation
process occurring rapidly on the n.m.r, time scale. Multiple-state
denaturations can be observed by the non-coincidence of curves of F (determined
from different resonances) against denaturant parameter or from the occurrence
of proton resonances which are only observed in the transition region. ��� Lysozyme is not denatured in 8M urea at pH
> 3.0. At pH 2.8 the NH resonances of arginine sharpen before those of many
other proton resonances in the molecule which sharpen simultaneously. It is
concluded that three clusters of arginine side-chains, which involve seven
arginine residues, unfold before the bulk of the molecule. Denaturation of
α-lactalbumin in urea at pH 2.5 and pH 6.0 in D2O occurs over a
broad range of concentrations and is clearly multiple state at pH 6.0. ��� The N.M.R. study shows the presence of an
exposed methionine residue in α-lactalbumin, no evidence of high field
perturbed methyl resonances, and a considerably reduced stability to
denaturation as compared with lysozyme. The dearth of aliphatic-aromatic
interactions in α-lactalbumin may account for its more open structure
compared with lysozyme as well as its reduced stability towards denaturation.
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25 articles.
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