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Pressure effects on protein structures

Abstract. Walter Kauzmann stated in a review of protein thermodynamics that volume and enthalpy changes are equally fundamental properties of the unfolding process, and no model can be considered acceptable unless it accounts for the entire thermodynamic behaviour (Nature 325 763-764, 1987). While the thermodynamic basis for pressure effects has been known for some time, the molecular mechanisms have remained rather mysterious. We, and others in the rather small field of pressure effects on protein structure and stability, have attempted since that time to clarify the molecular and physical basis for the changes in volume that accompany protein conformational transitions, and hence to explain pressure effects on proteins. The combination of many years of work on a model system, staphylococcal nuclease and its large numbers of site-specific mutants, and the rather new pressure perturbation calorimetry approach has provided for the first time a fundamental qualitative understanding of AV of unfolding, the quantitative basis of which remains the goal of current work. [Pg.173]

Mozhaev, V.V., Heremans, K., Frank, J., Masson, P., Balny, C. High-pressure effects on protein structure and function, Proteins. 24 (1996) 81-91. [Pg.187]


See other pages where Pressure effects on protein structures is mentioned: [Pg.253]    [Pg.65]   


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