Abstract
Structural modifications of ovalbumin, ovotransferrin, and lysozyme at the air-water interface have been investigated using SDS-PAGE, both intrinsic and ANS fluorometry, and circular dichroism experiments. Ovalbumin contact with an interface induced an exposure of aromatic residues, a slight decrease in alpha-helix structures (-1.7%), and an increase in both beta-sheet (+3.4%) and beta-turn (+7.9%) structures. Moreover, these conformational changes led to the formation of insoluble polymers of ovalbumin through intermolecular disulfide bonds. Ovotransferrin contact with an interface led to an increase in its surface hydrophobicity (+30%) and modifications of its secondary structure (-33% of alpha-helices, +96.4% of beta-sheets, +13.2% of beta-turns, and +21.2% of random coils), characteristic of major conformational changes. On the other hand, lysozyme did not undergo any structural modification. These results clearly underscore that at the air-water interface proteins are susceptible to denaturation.
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