G. Sartor et Gp. Johari, THERMODYNAMIC-EQUILIBRIUM OF WATER AND ICE IN HYDRATED GLIADIN AND HEMOGLOBIN, JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 101(33), 1997, pp. 6575-6582
Crystallization of water and the water-ice equilibrium in the hydrated
states (1 g of H2O/g of dry protein) of gliadin and hemoglobin have b
een studied by differential scanning calorimetry. Water and ice coexis
t at a thermodynamic equilibrium at all temperatures in the 230-272 K
range. Their relative amounts have been determined from 260 to 273 K,
and a formalism based on equilibrium thermodynamics has been developed
. The temperature dependence of the equilibrium constant of the water
<----> ice interconversion does not obey the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation,
and this indicates a strong interaction of proteins with water. By us
ing the measured equilibrium constant at different temperatures and th
e difference between the C-p of the solutions in equilibrium with ice
and the ice itself in the hydrated proteins, the DSC scans obtained du
ring cooling have been simulated. The kinetics of crystallization is n
ot determined entirely by the grain-growth process. A double crystalli
zation peak has been observed on cooling hydrated gliadin from 274 K,
after the sample had been thermally cycled in the 230-273 K range and
annealed at 274 K. Among the nine contributions to the enthalpy and en
tropy change on cooling and annealing at subfreezing temperatures, the
largest contribution remains that from water's crystallization in the
hydrated proteins. The amount of water in equilibrium with ice in the
two proteins is comparable to that determined for relatively impure p
roteins. This underscores the importance of H-bond interaction with th
e protein molecules over that of the effects of impurities.