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Abstract

A set of physicochemical properties describing a protein of known structure is employed for a calibrative approach to protein solubility. Common hydrodynamic and electrophoretic properties routinely measured in the bio-analytical laboratory such as zeta potential, dipole moment, the second osmotic virial coefficient are first estimated in silico as a function a pH and solution ionic strength starting with the protein crystal structure. The utility of these descriptors in understanding the solubility of a series of ribonuclease Sa mutants is investigated. A simple two parameter model was trained using solubility data of the wild type protein measured at a restricted number of solution pHs. Solubility estimates of the mutants demonstrate that zeta potential and dipole moment may be used to rationalize solubility trends over a wide pH range. Additionally a calibrative model based on the protein's second osmotic virial coefficient, B ^sub 22^ was developed. A modified DVLO type potential along with a simplified representation of the protein allowed for efficient computation of the second viral coefficient. The standard error of prediction for both models was on the order of 0.3 log S units. These results are very encouraging and demonstrate that these models may be trained with a small number of samples and employed extrapolatively for estimating mutant solubilities.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Calibrative approaches to protein solubility modeling of a mutant series using physicochemical descriptors
Author
Long, William F; Labute, P
Pages
907-16
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Nov 2010
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0920654X
e-ISSN
15734951
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
804130109
Copyright
Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2010