2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(259a) Heteropolymer Collapse Theory for Protein Folding in the Pressure-Temperature Plane
Authors
In this talk, we extend this theory to also account for pressure effects on the hydration of hydrophobic residues. In particular, we estimate the strength of the hydrophobic interactions using a molecular thermodynamic model for the interfacial free energy between liquid water and a curved hydrophobic solute. The model, which also reproduces many of the distinctive thermodynamic properties of aqueous solutions in bulk and interfacial environments, predicts that the water-solute interfacial free energy is significantly reduced by the application of high hydrostatic pressures. This allows water to penetrate into folded heteropolymers at high pressure and break apart their hydrophobic cores, a scenario suggested earlier by information theory calculations [2]. As a result, folded heteropolymers are predicted to display the kind of closed region of stability in the pressure-temperature plane exhibited by native proteins. We compare predictions of the collapse theory with experimental data for several proteins.
[1] K. A. Dill, D. O. V. Alonso, and K. Hutchinson. Biochemistry, 28: 5439-5449, 2006.
[2] G. Hummer, S. Garde, A. E. Garcia, A. Pohorille, and L. R. Pratt. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 93 :8951-8955, 1996.