Abstract

The circulatory protein, human serum albumin (HSA), is widely used as a model protein for the study of protein structure. In this work, the structures of human serum albumin in aqueous solutions are studied using temperature-dependent near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy with the aid of continuous wavelet transform (CWT). Near-infrared spectra of human serum albumin solutions with different concentrations were measured over a temperature range of 30-85 ℃. Then, continuous wavelet transform was performed on the spectra to enhance the resolution. As a result of the resolution enhancement, spectral bands around 4361, 4521, 4600 and 4260 cm-1 were extracted from the overlapping low-resolution signals. The four bands can be assigned to the protein structures of α-helix, β-sheet, an intermediate state and side chains, respectively. The variations in intensity of the bands around 4361 and 4521 cm-1 with temperature show that the increase of temperature leads to the loss of α-helical structure but the formation of β-sheet, and the denaturation temperature of human serum albumin is about 55 ℃. The variation of the band around 4600 cm-1 indicates that the temperature-induced unfolding process of human serum albumin occurs through a stable intermediate state, and a significant change in the microenvironment of the side chains about 63 ℃ is observed from the variation of the band around 4260 cm-1. On the other hand, the transformed spectra in the region of 8000-5600 cm-1 provide an explicit evidence for the structural changes of water during the process of protein denaturation, and the unfolding process of HSA can be reflected by these changes.

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