2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(24d) Impact of Ion Hydration and Preferential Interactions on Salt-Induced Protein Deactivation Kinetics
Authors
Since Hofmeister originally ranked salts by their effectiveness at salting-in or salting-out proteins, the same qualitative ranking has been found to predict the relative effects of salts on a number of other protein properties; however, quantitative correlations relating a salt's position in the Hofmeister series to its effect on proteins are rare. We evaluate the Jones-Dole B-viscosity coefficient, an indicator of ion hydration, as a predictor of salt effects on the kinetic stability of model proteins and find that the B-viscosity coefficient quantitatively predicts changes in kinetic deactivation constants of several widely varying proteins in different chaotropic sodium salt solutions. We use differential scanning calorimetry to analyze the mechanism of deactivation and find that prediction of biocatalyst deactivation from B-viscosity coefficients is possible when either unfolding or aggregation are the limiting steps of deactivation. These observed relationships between deactivation constants and ion hydration may be explained by preferential binding or exclusion phenomena, and preferential binding measurements testing this hypothesis will be presented.