Impact of denaturing agents on surface properties of myoglobin solutions.

Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces

Department of Colloid Chemistry, St. Petersburg State University, Universitetsky pr. 26, St.-Petersburg, 198504, Russia. Electronic address:

Published: June 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The addition of denaturants significantly alters the surface properties of aqueous myoglobin solutions, differentiating them from mixed solutions of other globular proteins like BSA, lysozyme, and BLG.
  • Dynamic surface elasticity studies reveal that myoglobin solutions with guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) exhibit a rapid increase in elasticity followed by a slower rise, potentially due to protein aggregation at the surface, contrasting with the behavior seen in other globular proteins.
  • Ionic surfactants form complexes with myoglobin, leading to unique multistep adsorption kinetics that differ from the interactions observed with other proteins, as confirmed by advanced techniques like ellipsometry and infrared spectroscopy.

Article Abstract

The addition of denaturants strongly influences the surface properties of aqueous myoglobin solutions. The effect differs from the results for mixed solutions of the denaturants and other globular proteins, for example, bovine serum albumin (BSA), lysozyme and β-lactoglobulin (BLG), although the surface properties of the solutions of the pure proteins are similar. The kinetic dependencies of the dynamic surface elasticity of myoglobin solutions with guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) reveal at least two adsorption steps at denaturant concentrations higher than 1 M: a very fast increase of the dynamic surface elasticity to approximately 30 mN/m at the beginning of adsorption, and a slower growth to abnormally high values of 250-300 mN/m. At the same time, the surface elasticity of BSA/GuHCl, BLG/GuHCl and lysozyme/GuHCl solutions is a non-monotonic function of the surface age, and does not exceed 50 mN/m close to equilibrium. The high surface elasticity of myoglobin/GuHCl solutions may be associated with protein aggregation in the surface layer. The formation of aggregates is confirmed by ellipsometry and Brewster angle microscopy. The addition of ionic surfactants to protein solutions leads to the formation of myoglobin/surfactant complexes, and the kinetic dependencies of the dynamic surface elasticity display local maxima indicating multistep adsorption kinetics, unlike the corresponding results for solutions of other globular proteins mixed with ionic surfactants. Ellipsometry and infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy allow tracing the adsorption of the complexes and their displacement from the interface at high surfactant concentrations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.colsurfb.2021.111657DOI Listing

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