Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.102, No.5, 1416-1427, 2009
Protein Instability During HIC: Evidence of Unfolding Reversibility, and Apparent Adsorption Strength of Disulfide Bond-Reduced alpha-Lactalbumin Variants
A two-conformation, four-state model has been proposed to describe protein adsorption and unfolding behavior on hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) resins. In this work, we build upon previous study and application of a four-state model to the effect of salt concentration on the adsorption and unfolding of the model protein alpha-lactalbumin in HIG Contributions to the apparent adsorption strength of the wild-type protein from native and unfolded conformations, obtained using a deuterium labeling technique, reveal the free energy change and kinetics of unfolding on the resin, and demonstrate that surface unfolding is reversible. Additionally, variants of alpha-lactalbumin in which one of the disulfide bonds is reduced were synthesized to examine the effects of conformational stability on apparent retention. Below the melting temperatures of the wild-type protein and variants, reduction of a single disulfide bond significantly increases the apparent adsorption strength (similar to 6-8 kJ/mol) due to increased instability of the protein. Finally, the four-state model is used to accurately predict the apparent adsorption strength of a disulfide bond-reduced variant.