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Title: Non-native aggregation of alpha-chymotrypsinogen occurs through nucleation and growth with competing nucleus sizes and negative activation energies. Author: Andrews JM, Roberts CJ. Journal: Biochemistry; 2007 Jun 26; 46(25):7558-71. PubMed ID: 17530865. Abstract: The kinetics and structural transitions of non-native aggregation of alpha-chymotrypsinogen (aCgn) were investigated over a wide range of temperature and initial protein concentration at pH 3.5, where high molecular weight aggregates remained soluble throughout the reaction. A comparison of thermodynamic, kinetic, and spectroscopic data shows that aggregation under non-native-favoring conditions proceeds through a molten globule unfolded monomer state, with a nucleation and growth mechanism. Formation of irreversible aggregates and conversion to beta-sheet secondary structures occur simultaneously without detectable intermediates, suggesting that beta-sheet formation may be a commitment step during the nucleation and growth stages. Analysis of the kinetics using a Lumry-Eyring with nucleated polymerization (LENP) model provides the predominant nucleus size and the product of the intrinsic nucleation and intrinsic growth time scales at each state point. We find that the nucleus size depends on both temperature and protein concentration, and in some cases there is competition between two distinct nucleus sizes. The observed rate coefficient (kobs) for aggregation displays a maximum as a function of temperature because of the competition between folding-unfolding thermodynamics and the intrinsic growth and nucleation rates; the latter contribution has a large, negative activation enthalpy that dominates kobs at elevated temperatures. Temperature-jump experiments reveal that aggregates depolymerize at high temperatures, indicating that they are lower in enthalpy than the free monomer. Overall, the results suggest more generally that non-native aggregation may proceed through more than one nucleus size and that intrinsic kinetics of nucleation and growth may have significant entropic barriers.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]