| dc.description.abstract |
In the work reported here, optically clear, ultrathin TEOS derived sol-gel slides
which were suitable for studies of tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence from entrapped proteins
were prepared by the sol-gel technique and characterized. The monitoring of intrinsic
protein fluorescence provided information about the structure and environment of the
entrapped protein, and about the kinetics of the interaction between the entrapped protein
and extemal reagents. Initial studies concentrated on the single Trp protein monellin which
was entrapped into the sol-gel matrices. Two types of sol-gel slides, termed "wet aged", in
which the gels were aged in buffer and "dry-aged", in which the gels were aged in air
,
were studied in order to compare the effect of the sol-gel matrix on the structure of the
protein at different aging stages. Fluorescence results suggested that the mobility of
solvent inside the slides was substantially reduced. The interaction of the entrapped
protein with both neutral and charged species was examined and indicated response times
on the order of minutes. In the case of the neutral species the kinetics were diffusion
limited in solution, but were best described by a sum of first order rate constants when the
reactions occurred in the glass matrix. For charged species, interactions between the
analytes and the negatively charged glass matrix caused the reaction kinetics to become
complex, with the overall reaction rate depending on both the type of aging and the charge
on the analyte.
The stability and conformational flexibility of the entrapped monellin were also
studied. These studies indicated that the encapsulation of monellin into dry-aged monoliths
caused the thermal unfolding transition to broaden and shift upward by 14°C, and causedthe long-term stability to improve by 12-fold (compared to solution). Chemical stability
studies also showed a broader transition for the unfolding of the protein in dry-aged
monoliths, and suggested that the protein was present in a distribution of environments.
Results indicated that the entrapped proteins had a smaller range of conformational
motions compared to proteins in solution, and that entrapped proteins were not able to
unfold completely. The restriction of conformational motion, along with the increased
structural order of the internal environment of the gels, likely resulted in the improvements
in themial and long-term stability that were observed.
A second protein which was also studied in this work is the metal binding protein
rat oncomodulin. Initially, the unfolding behavior of this protein in aqueous solution was
examined. Several single tryptophan mutants of the metal-binding protein rat oncomodulin
(OM) were examined; F102W, Y57W, Y65W and the engineered protein CDOM33 which
had all 12 residues of the CD loop replaced with a higher affinity binding loop. Both the
thermal and the chemical stability were improved upon binding of metal ions with the
order apo < Ca^^ < Tb^"^. During thermal denaturation, the transition midpoints (Tun) of
Y65W appeared to be the lowest, followed by Y57W and F102W. The placement of the
Trp residue in the F-helix in F102W apparently made the protein slightly more
thermostable, although the fluorescence response was readily affected by chemical
denaturants, which probably acted through the disruption of hydrogen bonds at the Cterminal
end of the F-helix. Under both thermal and chemical denaturation, the engineered
protein showed the highest stability. This indicated that increasing the number of metal
ligating oxygens in the binding site, either by using a metal ion with a higher coordinatenumber (i.e. Tb^*) which binds more carboxylate ligands, or by providing more ligating
groups, as in the CDOM33 replacement, produces notable improvements in protein
stability.
Y57W and CE)OM33 OM were chosen for further studies when encapsulated into
sol-gel derived matrices. The kinetics of interaction of terbium with the entrapped
proteins, the ability of the entrapped protein to binding terbium, as well as thermal stability
of these two entrapped protein were compared with different levels of Ca^"*^ present in the
matrix and in solution. Results suggested that for both of the proteins, the response time
and the ability to bind terbium could be adjusted by adding excess calcium to the matrix
before gelation. However, the less stable protein Y57W only retained at most 45% of its
binding ability in solution while the more stable protein CDOM33 was able to retain 100%
binding ability. Themially induced denaturation also suggested that CDOM33 showed
similar stability to the protein in solution while Y57W was destabilized. All these results
suggested that "hard" proteins (i.e. very stable) can easily survive the sol-gel encapsulation
process, but "soft" proteins with lower thermodynamic stability may not be able to
withstand the sol-gel process. However, it is possible to control many parameters in order
to successfully entrap biological molecules into the sol-gel matrices with maxunum
retention of activity. |
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