The stability of lysozyme adsorbed on silica and gallium arsenide surfaces: Preferential destabilization of part of the lysozyme structure by galliumarsenide
J. Buijs et al., The stability of lysozyme adsorbed on silica and gallium arsenide surfaces: Preferential destabilization of part of the lysozyme structure by galliumarsenide, J COLL I SC, 226(2), 2000, pp. 237-245
Changes in the structural stability of lysozyme, upon adsorption to silica
and gallium arsenide (GaAs) surfaces, are studied using a combination of hy
drogen/deuterium exchange and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization m
ass spectrometry, This relatively new method offers a tool for directly mon
itoring the structural stability of adsorbed proteins and generates values
for the stabilization energy of proteins and their domains in the adsorbed
state, The adsorption and desorption kinetics of lysozyme on silica and GaA
s surfaces are monitored with ellipsometry, From the adsorption kinetics it
can be inferred that lysozyme adsorbs somewhat faster and in slightly high
er amounts onto GaAs than on silica. The average Gibbs free energy required
to open the lysozyme structure in solution (5.7 kcal/mol) is only slightly
reduced upon adsorption onto silica, resulting in a Gibbs free energy of 5
.4 kcal/mol, Adsorption onto GaAs surfaces results in a larger decrease in
the stability of lysozyme, Moreover, a distinct difference in the stability
within the lysozyme molecule is observed. Whereas one part of lysozyme ads
orbed onto GaAs has an average structural stability of -5.5 kcal/mol, an ap
proximately equally large part of the molecule has a stability of -3.7 kcal
/mol, (C) 2000 Academic Press.