3.1 Papers
3.1.6 Chronological list
3.1.6.39 Chalikian, T.V., Totrov, M.M., Abagyan, R.A., Breslauer, K.J. (1996). The hydration of globular proteins as derived from volume and compressibility measurements: cross correlating thermodynamic and structural data. J. Mol. Biol., 260, 588-603
We report the first thermodynamic characterization of protein hydration that does not depend on model compound data
but rather is based exclusively on macroscopic (volumetric) and microscopic (X-ray) measurements on protein molecules
themselves. By combining these macroscopic and microscopic characterizations, we describe a quantitative model that
allows one for the first time to predict the partial specific volumes, v(zero), and the partial specific adiabatic
compressibilities, ks(zero), of globular proteins from the crystallographic coordinates of the constituent atoms, without
using data derived from studies on low-molecular-mass model compounds. Specifically, we have used acoustic and
densimetric techniques to determine v(zero) and ks(zero) for 15 globular proteins over a temperature range from 18 to 55
degrees C. For the subset of the 12 proteins with known three-dimensional structures, we calculated the molecular volumes
as well as the solvent-accessible surface areas of the constituent charged, polar and nonpolar atomic groups. By combining
these measured and calculated properties and applying linear regression analysis, we determined, as a function of
temperature, the average hydration contributions to v(zero) and ks(zero) of 1 A2 of the charged, polar, and nonpolar
solvent-accessible protein surfaces. We compared these results with those derived from studies on low-molecular-mass
compounds to assess the validity of existing models of protein hydration based on small molecule data. This comparison
revealed the following features: the hydration contributions to v(zero) and ks(zero) of charged protein surface groups are
similar to those of charged groups in small organic molecules. By contrast, the hydration contributions to v(zero) and
ks(zero) of polar protein surface groups are qualitatively different from those of polar groups in low-molecular-mass
compounds. We suggest that this disparity may reflect the presence of networks of water molecules adjacent to polar
protein surface areas, with these networks involving waters from second and third coordination spheres. For nonpolar
protein surface groups, we find the ability of low-molecular-mass compounds to model successfully protein properties
depends on the temperature domain being examined. Specifically, at room temperatures and below, the hydration
contribution to ks(zero) of protein nonpolar surface atomic groups is close to that of nonpolar groups in small organic
molecules. By contrast, at higher temperatures, the hydration contribution to ks(zero) of protein nonpolar surface groups
becomes more negative than that of nonpolar groups in small organic molecules. We suggest that this behaviour may reflect
nonpolar groups on protein surfaces being hydrated independently at low temperatures, while at higher temperatures some
of the solvating waters become influenced by neighboring polar groups. We discuss the implications of our aggregate results
in terms of various approaches currently being used to describe the hydration properties of globular proteins, particularly
focusing on the limitations of existing additive models based on small molecule data.