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Denaturant- or ligand-induced changes in protein volume by pressure shift assay.

Gediminas SkvarnavičiusZigmantas ToleikisDaumantas MatulisVytautas Petrauskas
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2022)
A complete thermodynamic description of protein-ligand binding includes parameters related to pressure and temperature. The changes in the protein volume and compressibility upon binding a ligand are pressure-related parameters that are often neglected due to the lack of routine methods for their determination. Fluorescent pressure shift assay (FPSA) is based on pressure-induced protein unfolding and its stabilization by a ligand and offers a universal approach to determine protein-ligand binding volumes. Extremely high pressures are required to unfold most proteins and protein-ligand complexes. Thus, guanidinium hydrochloride (GdmHCl) is used as a protein-destabilizing agent. We determined that GdmHCl unfolds carbonic anhydrase isoforms in a different pathway, but the destabilization effect is linear in a particular concentration range. We developed a concept for the FPSA experiment, where both - the ligand and GdmHCl - concentrations are varied. This approach enabled us to determine protein-ligand binding volumes that otherwise would be impossible due to the equipment-unreachable pressures of protein unfolding.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • mass spectrometry
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • clinical practice
  • tandem mass spectrometry