Abstract

Unfolding and aggregation are basic problems in protein science with serious biotechnological and medical implications. Probing the sequential events occurring during the unfolding and aggregation process and the relationship between unfolding and aggregation is of particular interest. In this study, two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) correlation spectroscopy was used to study the sequential events and starting temperature dependence of Myoglobin (Mb) thermal transitions. Though a two-state model could be obtained from traditional 1D IR spectra, subtle noncooperative conformational changes were observed at low temperatures. Formation of aggregation was observed at a temperature (50–58°C) that protein was dominated by native structures and accompanied with unfolding of native helical structures when a traditional thermal denaturation condition was used. The time course NMR study of Mb incubated at 55°C for 45h confirmed that an irreversible aggregation process existed. Aggregation was also observed before fully unfolding of the Mb native structure when a relative high starting temperature was used. These findings demonstrated that 2D IR correlation spectroscopy is a powerful tool to study protein aggregation and the protein aggregation process observed depends on the different environmental conditions used.

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