Effect of detergent concentration on the thermal stability of a membrane protein: The case study of bacterial reaction center solubilized by N,N-dimethyldodecylamine-N-oxide
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
We report on the response of reaction center (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (an archetype of membrane
proteins) to the exposure at high temperature. The RCs have been solubilized in aqueous solution of the
detergent N,N-dimethyldodecylamine-N-oxide (LDAO). Changes in the protein conformation have been
probed by monitoring the variation in the absorbance of the bacteriochlorine cofactors and modification in
the efficiency of energy transfer from tryptophans to cofactors and among the cofactors (through
fluorescence measurements). The RC aggregation taking place at high temperature has been investigated by
means of dynamic light scattering. Two experimental protocols have been used: (i) isothermal kinetics, in
which the time evolution of RC after a sudden increase of the temperature is probed, and (ii) T-scans, in
which the RCs are heated at constant rate. The analysis of the results coming from both the experiments
indicates that the minimal kinetic scheme requires an equilibrium step and an irreversible process. The
irreversible step is characterized by a activation energy of 205±14 kJ/mol and is independent from the
detergent concentration. Since the temperature dependence of the aggregation rate was found to obey to the
same law, the aggregation process is unfolding-limited. On the other hand, the equilibrium process between
the native and a partially unfolded conformations was found to be strongly dependent on the detergent
concentration. Increasing the LDAO content from 0.025 to 0.5 wt.% decreases the melting temperature from
49 to 42 °C. This corresponds to a sizeable (22 kJ/mol at 25 °C) destabilization of the native conformation
induced by the detergent. The nature of the aggregates formed by the denatured RCs depends on the
temperature. For temperature below 60 °C compact aggregates are formed while at 60 °C the clusters are less
dense with a scaling relation between mass and size close to that expected for diffusion-limited aggregation.
The aggregate final sizes formed at different temperatures indicate the presence of an even number of
proteins suggesting that these clusters are formed by aggregation of dimers.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Photosynthetic reaction center; Thermal denaturation; Detergent; Protein aggregation
Elenco autori:
Mallardi, Antonia
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