Litcius/Paper detail

Macromolecular Crowding by Polyethylene Glycol Reduces Protein Breathing

I-Te Chu, Brent O. Hutcheson, Hudson R. Malsch, Gary J. Pielak

2023The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters32 citationsDOI

Abstract

Most efforts to understand macromolecular crowding focus on global (i.e., complete) unfolding, but smaller excursions, often called breathing, promote aggregation, which is associated with several diseases and the bane of pharmaceutical and commercial protein production. We used NMR to assess the effects of ethylene glycol (EG) and polyethylene glycols (PEGs) on the structure and stability of the B1 domain of protein G (GB1). Our data show that EG and PEGs stabilize GB1 differently. EG interacts with GB1 more strongly than PEGs, but neither affects the structure of the folded state. EG and 12000 g/mol PEG stabilize GB1 more than PEGs of intermediate size, but EG and smaller PEGs stabilize GB1 enthalpically while the largest PEG acts entropically. Our key finding is that PEGs turn local unfolding into global unfolding, and meta-analysis of published data supports this conclusion. These efforts provide knowledge that can be applied to improve biological drugs and commercial enzymes.

Topics & Concepts

Macromolecular crowdingPolyethylene glycolChemistryEthylene glycolMacromoleculePEG ratioBiophysicsCrystallographyStereochemistryBiochemistryOrganic chemistryBiologyFinanceEconomicsProtein Structure and DynamicsProtein purification and stabilityEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease