ATTRACTIVE AND REPULSIVE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN AND WITHIN ADSORBED RIBONUCLEASE-A LAYERS

被引:27
作者
BELFORT, G
LEE, CS
机构
[1] Bioseparations Research Center, Department of Chemical Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy
[2] Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Maryland, Baltimore Campus, Baltimore
关键词
ENZYME ADSORPTION; MOLECULAR INTERACTIONS AND FORCES; STERIC REPULSION; ATTRACTION AND BRIDGING; LATTICE MODEL;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.88.20.9146
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Adsorbed layers of pancreatic RNase A on molecularly smooth mica in aqueous solution attract inorganic mica surfaces whereas they repel similarly adsorbed RNase A layers. As the clean mica surface is covered with RNase A, the attractive interaction slowly diminishes with time and eventually converts to a purely repulsive interaction. Solvent is squeezed out of the solution in the gap during compression of the two surfaces so that the adsorbed protein concentration, as measured directly by the refractive index, increases significantly. The kinetics of this process is analyzed using surface force-distance measurements. All these results are predicted for constrained equilibrium by a discrete lattice model [Scheutjens, J. M. H. M. & Fleer, G. J. (1985) Macromolecules 18, 1882-1900]. Reasonable values are obtained for the constants of the model. We also report on the equilibrium behavior and interaction of densely adsorbed RNase A layers in aqueous solutions of varying ionic strength and pH. With increasing ionic strength, intramolecular forces dominate with diminished electrostatic repulsion. Thus, the adsorbed protein layer becomes more compact while unattached protein molecules coil and fold, making them less likely to form strong intermolecular bridges. Only at very low ionic strength (0.1 mM KCl), when electrostatic forces dominate, does the membrane potential model come close to predicting the long-distance repulsive behavior. Thus, at higher ionic strengths, other non-electrostatic interactions (such as hydrophobic interactions) possibly dominate. An increase in the pH of the solution from 5 to 9.2, the pI of RNase A, significantly reduces the electrostatic repulsion between protein molecules in favor of hydrophobic attractive interactions. This results in lower short-range steric repulsion. However, in contrast to the ionic-strength effect, an increased long-range repulsive force with a much longer decay length is observed. This may be due to contaminants such as DNase that have their pI at a pH other than 9.2. Thus, as with the changing-ionic-strength study, thinner and denser adsorbed layers are formed. Finally, for the kinetic studies, two characteristic length scales-the thickness of the adsorbed layer and the "jump-in" distance-vary linearly with the square root of time. This is consistent with our earlier results and once again implies a diffusion-driven process.
引用
收藏
页码:9146 / 9150
页数:5
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]   FORCES BETWEEN MODEL POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS ADSORBED ON MICA SURFACES [J].
AFSHARRAD, T ;
BAILEY, AI ;
LUCKHAM, PF ;
MACNAUGHTAN, W ;
CHAPMAN, D .
COLLOIDS AND SURFACES, 1988, 31 :125-146
[2]   FORCES BETWEEN PROTEINS AND MODEL POLYPEPTIDES ADSORBED ON MICA SURFACES [J].
AFSHARRAD, T ;
BAILEY, AI ;
LUCKHAM, PF ;
MACNAUGHTAN, W ;
CHAPMAN, D .
BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA, 1987, 915 (01) :101-111
[3]  
AFSHARRAD T, 1986, J CHEM SOC FARADAY T, V81, P239
[4]  
Creighton T. E., 1984, PROTEINS STRUCTURES, V2nd
[5]   POLYMERS AT AN INTERFACE .2. INTERACTION BETWEEN 2 PLATES CARRYING ADSORBED POLYMER LAYERS [J].
DEGENNES, PG .
MACROMOLECULES, 1982, 15 (02) :492-500
[6]   Analysis of friction and adhesion IV The theory of the adhesion of small particles [J].
Derjaguin, B .
KOLLOID-ZEITSCHRIFT, 1934, 69 (02) :155-164
[7]   DOMINANT FORCES IN PROTEIN FOLDING [J].
DILL, KA .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1990, 29 (31) :7133-7155
[8]  
FERSHT AR, 1987, PROTEIN ENG, P269
[9]  
GETZOFF ED, 1988, ADV IMMUNOL, V43, P1
[10]   A DYNAMIC-MODEL FOR RECEPTOR-MEDIATED CELL-ADHESION TO SURFACES [J].
HAMMER, DA ;
LAUFFENBURGER, DA .
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1987, 52 (03) :475-487