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Contrasting the denaturing effect of guanidinium chloride with the stabilizing effect of guanidinium sulfate
Authors:Graziano Giuseppe
Affiliation:Dipartimento di Scienze Biologiche ed Ambientali, Università del Sannio, Via Port'Arsa 11-82100 Benevento, Italy. graziano@unisannio.it
Abstract:Guanidinium chloride, GdmCl, is a strong denaturing agent of globular proteins, whereas guanidinium sulfate, Gdm(2)SO(4), is a stabilizing agent of globular proteins. The stabilizing activity of Gdm(2)SO(4) is unexpected because the denaturant capability of GdmCl is due to direct interactions of Gdm(+) ions with protein surface groups. It is shown that the statistical thermodynamic approach devised to explain the molecular origin of cold denaturation [G. Graziano, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 14245-14252] can provide a rationalization of the different behaviour of GdmCl and Gdm(2)SO(4) towards globular proteins. The fundamental quantity is the reversible work to create in the aqueous solution a cavity suitable to host the D-state and a cavity suitable to host the N-state. In aqueous GdmCl solutions, this contribution is not large enough to overwhelm the conformational entropy gain upon unfolding and the direct attractions between Gdm(+) ions and protein surface groups; in aqueous Gdm(2)SO(4) solutions, it is so large that it overwhelms the two destabilizing contributions. Sulfate ions, due to their high charge density, interact strongly with water molecules producing a number density increase, that, in turn, renders the cavity creation process very costly, reversing the denaturing power of Gdm(+) ions and stabilizing the N-state of globular proteins.
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