Modulating protein unfolding and refolding via the synergistic association of an anionic and a nonionic surfactant
(2024) In Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 672. p.244-255- Abstract
Hypothesis: Nonionic surfactants can counter the deleterious effect that anionic surfactants have on proteins, where the folded states are retrieved from a previously unfolded state. However, further studies are required to refine our understanding of the underlying mechanism of the refolding process. While interactions between nonionic surfactants and tightly folded proteins are not anticipated, we hypothesized that intermediate stages of surfactant-induced unfolding could define new interaction mechanisms by which nonionic surfactants can further alter protein conformation. Experiments: In this work, the behavior of three model proteins (human growth hormone, bovine serum albumin, and β-lactoglobulin) was investigated in the presence... (More)
Hypothesis: Nonionic surfactants can counter the deleterious effect that anionic surfactants have on proteins, where the folded states are retrieved from a previously unfolded state. However, further studies are required to refine our understanding of the underlying mechanism of the refolding process. While interactions between nonionic surfactants and tightly folded proteins are not anticipated, we hypothesized that intermediate stages of surfactant-induced unfolding could define new interaction mechanisms by which nonionic surfactants can further alter protein conformation. Experiments: In this work, the behavior of three model proteins (human growth hormone, bovine serum albumin, and β-lactoglobulin) was investigated in the presence of the anionic surfactant sodium dodecylsulfate, the nonionic surfactant β-dodecylmaltoside, and mixtures of both surfactants. The transitions occurring to the proteins were determined using intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy and far-UV circular dichroism. Based on these results, we developed a detailed interaction model for human growth hormone. Using nuclear magnetic resonance and contrast-variation small-angle neutron scattering, we studied the amino acid environment and the conformational state of the protein. Findings: The results demonstrate the key role of surfactant cooperation in defining the conformational state of the proteins, which can shift away or toward the folded state depending on the nonionic-to-ionic surfactant ratio. Dodecylmaltoside, initially a non-interacting surfactant, can unexpectedly associate with sodium dodecylsulfate-unfolded proteins to further impact their conformation at low nonionic-to-ionic surfactant ratio. When this ratio increases, the protein begins to retrieve the folded state. However, the native conformation cannot be fully recovered due to remnant surfactant molecules still adsorbed to the protein. This study demonstrates that the conformational landscape of the protein depends on a delicate interplay between the surfactants, ultimately controlled by the ratio between them, resulting in unpredictable changes in the protein conformation.
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- author
- Hjalte, Johanna LU ; Diehl, Carl ; Leung, Anna E. ; Poon, Jia Fei LU ; Porcar, Lionel ; Dalgliesh, Rob ; Sjögren, Helen ; Wahlgren, Marie LU and Sanchez-Fernandez, Adrian LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2024
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
- volume
- 672
- pages
- 12 pages
- publisher
- Elsevier
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:38838632
- scopus:85195025782
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.jcis.2024.05.157
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 0295f2d1-b3cb-46db-8765-a0c15c07de35
- date added to LUP
- 2024-07-03 14:59:17
- date last changed
- 2024-11-07 06:33:50
@article{0295f2d1-b3cb-46db-8765-a0c15c07de35, abstract = {{<p>Hypothesis: Nonionic surfactants can counter the deleterious effect that anionic surfactants have on proteins, where the folded states are retrieved from a previously unfolded state. However, further studies are required to refine our understanding of the underlying mechanism of the refolding process. While interactions between nonionic surfactants and tightly folded proteins are not anticipated, we hypothesized that intermediate stages of surfactant-induced unfolding could define new interaction mechanisms by which nonionic surfactants can further alter protein conformation. Experiments: In this work, the behavior of three model proteins (human growth hormone, bovine serum albumin, and β-lactoglobulin) was investigated in the presence of the anionic surfactant sodium dodecylsulfate, the nonionic surfactant β-dodecylmaltoside, and mixtures of both surfactants. The transitions occurring to the proteins were determined using intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy and far-UV circular dichroism. Based on these results, we developed a detailed interaction model for human growth hormone. Using nuclear magnetic resonance and contrast-variation small-angle neutron scattering, we studied the amino acid environment and the conformational state of the protein. Findings: The results demonstrate the key role of surfactant cooperation in defining the conformational state of the proteins, which can shift away or toward the folded state depending on the nonionic-to-ionic surfactant ratio. Dodecylmaltoside, initially a non-interacting surfactant, can unexpectedly associate with sodium dodecylsulfate-unfolded proteins to further impact their conformation at low nonionic-to-ionic surfactant ratio. When this ratio increases, the protein begins to retrieve the folded state. However, the native conformation cannot be fully recovered due to remnant surfactant molecules still adsorbed to the protein. This study demonstrates that the conformational landscape of the protein depends on a delicate interplay between the surfactants, ultimately controlled by the ratio between them, resulting in unpredictable changes in the protein conformation.</p>}}, author = {{Hjalte, Johanna and Diehl, Carl and Leung, Anna E. and Poon, Jia Fei and Porcar, Lionel and Dalgliesh, Rob and Sjögren, Helen and Wahlgren, Marie and Sanchez-Fernandez, Adrian}}, issn = {{0021-9797}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{244--255}}, publisher = {{Elsevier}}, series = {{Journal of Colloid and Interface Science}}, title = {{Modulating protein unfolding and refolding via the synergistic association of an anionic and a nonionic surfactant}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.05.157}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.jcis.2024.05.157}}, volume = {{672}}, year = {{2024}}, }