Title of article
HEAT CAPACITY IN PROTEINS
Author/Authors
Prabhu، Ninad V. نويسنده , , Sharp، Kim.A. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
28
From page
521
To page
548
Abstract
Heat capacity (Cp) is one of several major thermodynamic quantities commonly measured in proteins. With more than half a dozen definitions, it is the hardest of these quantities to understand in physical terms, but the richest in insight. There are many ramifications of observed Cp changes: The sign distinguishes apolar from polar solvation. It imparts a temperature (T) dependence to entropy and enthalpy that may change their signs and which of them dominate. Protein unfolding usually has a positive deltaCp, producing a maximum in stability and sometimes cold denaturation. There are two heat capacity contributions, from hydration and protein-protein interactions; which dominates in folding and binding is an open question. Theoretical work to date has dealt mostly with the hydration term and can account, at least semiquantitatively, for the major Cp-related features: the positive and negative Cp of hydration for apolar and polar groups, respectively; the convergence of apolar group hydration entropy at T ≈ 112◦C; the decrease in apolar hydration Cp with increasing T; and the T-maximum in protein stability and cold denaturation.
Keywords
hydrophobic effect , entropy-enthalpy compensation , protein stability , protein hydration
Journal title
Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
Record number
121401
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