H. Yamada et al., CONTRIBUTION OF A HYDROGEN-BOND TO THE THERMAL-STABILITY OF THE MUTANT HUMAN LYSOZYME C77 95S/, Biological & pharmaceutical bulletin, 17(5), 1994, pp. 612-616
The structural stability due to a disulfide bridge between Cys77 and C
ys95 of the wild-type human lysozyme is partly recovered by a putative
hydrogen bond introduced in to the mutant human lysozyme C77/95S, whe
re Cys77 and Cys95 have been replaced by serines (Yamada et al. (1994)
Biol. 'Pharm. Bull., 17, 192 (1994). In order to understand quantitat
ively the role of the hydrogen bond in the thermal stability of the mu
tant human lysozyme, we constructed further mutant proteins, C77SC95A
in which Cys77 and Cys95 were replaced by serine and alanine, respecti
vely, and C77AC95S, in which Cys77 and Cys95 were replaced by alanine
and serine, respectively. From the thermal unfolding studies of these
mutant proteins, both C77SC95A and C77AC95S were shown to be destabili
zed up to -0.81 and -1.32 kcal/mol, respectively, as far as the free e
nergy changes of unfolding were concerned by compared with C77/95A, wh
ere both Cys77 and Cys95 were replaced by two alanines. Considering th
at these decreases in conformational stability are attributable to hyd
rophobic effects, the hydrogen bond between Ser77 and Ser95, buried in
the hydrophobic cavity in C77/95S, was estimated as 3.0 kcal/mol.