Abstract

A recent investigation was aimed at obtaining structural information on a highly extended protein via SEC-MALS-SAXS. Significantly broadened elution peaks were observed, reminiscent of a phenomenon known as viscous fingering. This phenomenon is usually observed above 50mg/mL for proteins like bovine serum albumin (BSA). Interestingly, the highly extended protein (Brpt5.5) showed viscous fingering at concentrations lower than 5mg/mL. The current study explores this and other non-ideal behavior, emphasizing the presence of these effects at relatively low concentrations for extended proteins. BSA, Brpt5.5, and a truncated form of Brpt5.5 referred to as Brpt1.5 are studied systematically using size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC), and viscosity. The viscous fingering effect is quantified using two approaches and is found to correlate well with the intrinsic viscosity of the proteins-Brpt5.5 exhibits the most severe effect and is the most extended protein tested in the study. By AUC, the hydrodynamic non-ideality was measured for each protein via global analysis of a concentration series. Compared to BSA, both Brpt1.5 and Brpt5.5 showed significant non-ideality that could be easily visualized at concentrations at or below 5mg/mL and 1mg/mL, respectively. A variety of relationships were examined for their ability to differentiate the proteins by shape using information from AUC and/or viscosity. Furthermore, these relationships were also tested in the context of hydrodynamic modeling. The importance of considering non-ideality when investigating the structure of extended macromolecules is discussed.

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