Abstract

Experimental p K values of ionizable sidechains provide the most direct test for models representing dielectric shielding within the interior of a protein. However, only the strongly shifted p K values are particularly useful for discriminating among models. NMR titration studies have usually found only one or two such shifted p K values in each protein, so that the fitting of the experimental data to a uniform internal dielectric ( ε int) model is not well constrained. The observed variation among proteins for such ε int estimates may reflect nonuniformity of dielectric shielding within each protein interior or qualitative differences between individual proteins. The differential amide kinetic acidities for a series of metal-substituted rubredoxins are shown to be consistent with Poisson–Boltzmann predictions of dielectric shielding that is relatively uniform for all of the amides that are sensitive to the metal charge, a region which corresponds to roughly 1 / 3 of the internal volume. The effective ε int values near 6 that are found in this study are significantly lower than many such estimates derived from sidechain p K measurements. The differing timeframes in which dielectric relaxation can respond to the highly transient peptide anion as compared to the longer lived states of the charged sidechains offers an explanation for the lower apparent dielectric constant deduced from these measurements.

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