0000000000730651

AUTHOR

M. G. Cacace

showing 1 related works from this author

Interfacial water structure controls protein conformation.

2007

A phenomenological theory of salt-induced Hofmeister phenomena is presented, based on a relation between protein solubility in salt solutions and protein-water interfacial tension. As a generalization of previous treatments, it implies that both kosmotropic salting out and chaotropic salting in are manifested via salt-induced changes of the hydrophobic/hydrophilic properties of protein-water interfaces. The theory is applied to describe the salt-dependent free energy profiles of proteins as a function of their water-exposed surface area. On this basis, three classes of protein conformations have been distinguished, and their existence experimentally demonstrated using the examples of bacter…

DYNAMICSMECHANISMKosmotropicProtein ConformationSURFACE-TENSIONSurface tensionchemistry.chemical_compoundProtein structureMaterials ChemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPURPLE MEMBRANESPECTROSCOPYbiologySTABILITYBACTERIORHODOPSINMyoglobinSALTTemperatureWaterBacteriorhodopsinSTABILITY MECHANISMSurfaces Coatings and FilmsION SPECIFICITYChaotropic agentCrystallographyMyoglobinchemistryTEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCEChemical physicsStructural stabilityBacteriorhodopsinsbiology.proteinSalting outThermodynamicsThe journal of physical chemistry. B
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