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An investigation of the thermal stability of polyglycyl bovine serum albumin

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Title An investigation of the thermal stability of polyglycyl bovine serum albumin
Names Harris, Ward Edwin (creator)
Becker, R. R. (advisor)
Date Issued 1967-08-25 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1968
Abstract A heat stable derivative of bovine serum albumin containing
300 residues of glycine added to 30 sites on the surface of the protein
has been prepared. This derivative may be heated to 100° C for
prolonged periods of time without aggregation. By comparison,
native BSA aggregates at 62° C under similar conditions. The
spatial arrangement of the added glycine peptides is probably
responsible for the observed stabilization of the protein. Two possible
arrangements of the added glycyl chains have been suggested.
The first considers the chains to be fully extended and projecting
into the surrounding solvent. The second envisions the added chains
folded back along the protein surface. The experimental evidence
greatly favors the second suggestion.
Using trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid, it was determined that
there were thirty reactive amino groups on the surface of native BSA.
After denaturation of the protein with 8 M urea; 57 lysine groups could be reacted. Since the preparation of the polyglycyl derivative
is carried out under similar reaction conditions to those employed
with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid, it is most likely that the amino
groups on the surface of the molecule react with the N-carboxy glycine anhydride.
The conformation characteristic of native BSA appears to be
maintained in the derivative as indicated by various experimental
measurements. The change in rotation associated with the acid
expansion of BSA is paralleled by a similar but smaller change in
the derivative. At pH 5.5 the specific rotation of the derivative was
-47.7° and the native was -64.6°. The value for the polyglycyl BSA
is several degrees lower than would be expected if it possessed the
identical molar rotation as the native protein. A similar decrease
in levorotation has been reported when ten moles of anionic detergent
are bound to one mole of BSA The ultraviolet difference spectra
observed by perturbing the native and derivative protein by pH and
heat indicated that the main matrix of each protein was undergoing a
similar transition. In all cases observed the derivative showed less
change in optical density than did the native protein. If the glycine
chains were folded back along the protein surface shielding some
chromophoric groups from contact with the solvent, this decrease
could be explained.
The hydrodynamic measurements also support the suggestion that the structure of the protein core of the derivative is retained.
The derivative undergoes the same reversible acid expansion as the
native protein. Polyglycyl BSA with an S₂₀ value of 3.85 at pH 2.5
regained its native conformation which had a sedimentation coefficient
of 5.45 by dialysis against phosphate buffer at pH 6.3. By approximations that
may be made from the diffusion coefficient, it was
shown that the degree of hydration of the derivative could have a
large variation depending upon the spatial arrangement of the added
peptides. If the added peptides were folded, the hydration would be
less than the native protein and if they were extended the hydration
would be greater than the native protein. The hydration was
evaluated by the determination of the buoyant density of polyglycyl
BSA in a series of salt solutions. The values of the hydration of
the protein-salt complex determined are as follows: in CsC1, 0.42 gm
H₂O/gm protein; in RbBr, 0.37 gm H₂O/gm protein; and in KBr, 0.33
gm H₂O/gm protein. The corresponding values of the hydration of
the protein-salt complex for bovine mercaptalbumin reported by Ifft
and Vinograd are as follows: in CsC1, 0.51 gm H₂O/gm protein; in
RbBr, 0.46 gm H₂O/gm protein and in KBr, 0.37 gm H₂O/gm protein.
The decrease in hydration found in the derivative may be adequately
explained by the change in the surface to volume ratio that would be
expected if the added peptides were folded back along the protein
surface. An approximate calculation of the surface to volume ratio of the derivative in this configuration gives a value of 0.83 that of the
native protein. A similar calculation assuming that the chains are
extended gives a ratio of 1.5. The decrease found is clearly more
consistent with a molecule in which the added peptide chains are
folded back along the protein surface. An increase of the activity
of water accompanied by an increase in the hydration of the protein
has been presented previously by Ifft and Vinograd, and was found
to be valid for the hydration of the derivative.
Considering the experimental evidence that has been presented,
it is felt that the added polyglycyl chains are folded back along the
surface of the protein. When they are in this configuration they
form hydrogen bonds with groups on the surface of the protein and
would cover some of the hydrophobic regions on the surface of the
protein. Both of these effects would cause the derivative to be more
stable than the native protein.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Serum albumin
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47055

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