Chemical and Engineering Materials Division, Neutron Sciences Directorate, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, United States.
Biology and Soft Matter Division, Neutron Sciences Directorate, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, United States.
Biochim Biophys Acta Gen Subj. 2017 Jan;1861(1 Pt B):3513-3519. doi: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2016.04.024. Epub 2016 May 3.
We have studied microscopic dynamics of a protein in carbon disulfide, a non-glass forming solvent, down to its freezing temperature of ca. 160K.
We have utilized quasielastic neutron scattering.
A comparison of lysozyme hydrated with water and dissolved in carbon disulfide reveals a stark difference in the temperature dependence of the protein's microscopic relaxation dynamics induced by the solvent. In the case of hydration water, the common protein glass-forming solvent, the protein relaxation slows down in response to a large increase in the water viscosity on cooling down, exhibiting a well-known protein dynamical transition. The dynamical transition disappears in non-glass forming carbon disulfide, whose viscosity remains a weak function of temperature all the way down to freezing at just below 160K. The microscopic relaxation dynamics of lysozyme dissolved in carbon disulfide is sustained down to the freezing temperature of its solvent at a rate similar to that measured at ambient temperature.
Our results demonstrate that protein dynamical transition is not merely solvent-assisted, but rather solvent-induced, or, more precisely, is a reflection of the temperature dependence of the solvent's glass-forming dynamics.
We hypothesize that, if the long debated idea regarding the direct link between the microscopic relaxations and the biological activity in proteins is correct, then not only the microscopic relaxations, but also the activity, could be sustained in proteins all the way down to the freezing temperature of a non-glass forming solvent with a weak temperature dependence of its viscosity. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled "Science for Life" Guest Editor: Dr. Austen Angell, Dr. Salvatore Magazù and Dr. Federica Migliardo.
我们研究了在非玻璃形成溶剂二硫化碳中一种蛋白质的微观动力学,直至其约 160K 的冰点。
我们利用了准弹性中子散射。
对比水合溶菌酶和溶解在二硫化碳中的溶菌酶,揭示了溶剂对蛋白质微观弛豫动力学的影响在温度依赖性方面存在明显差异。在水合状态下,即常见的蛋白质玻璃形成溶剂中,随着冷却时水粘度的大幅增加,蛋白质弛豫会减缓,表现出众所周知的蛋白质动力学转变。在非玻璃形成的二硫化碳中,动力学转变消失了,其粘度在接近 160K 的冰点温度范围内仍然是温度的弱函数。在二硫化碳中溶解的溶菌酶的微观弛豫动力学以类似于在环境温度下测量的速率维持到其溶剂的冰点,速率保持不变。
我们的结果表明,蛋白质动力学转变不仅仅是溶剂辅助的,而是溶剂诱导的,或者更准确地说,反映了溶剂玻璃形成动力学的温度依赖性。
我们假设,如果关于蛋白质微观弛豫与生物活性之间直接联系的长期争论的观点是正确的,那么不仅微观弛豫,而且活性,都可以在蛋白质中维持,直至非玻璃形成溶剂的冰点,而这种溶剂的粘度对温度的依赖性很弱。本文是题为“Science for Life”的特刊的一部分,客座编辑:Austen Angell 博士、Salvatore Magazù 博士和 Federica Migliardo 博士。