4.6 Article

Effects of water on the solvation and structure of lipase in deep eutectic solvents containing a protein destabilizer and stabilizer

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 40, Pages 23372-23379

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp03282h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Startup Funds of the University of Kentucky
  2. Igniting Research Collaboration at the University of Kentucky
  3. National Science Foundation [1632854]
  4. Office Of The Director
  5. Office of Integrative Activities [1632854] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Research indicates that aqueous deep eutectic solvent (DES) solutions have an impact on the solvation and structure of lipase protein, with water molecules weakening the protein-DES hydrogen bonds and altering the surface area and conformation of the active site. This shows that the effect of water on biocatalysis in aqueous DESs is influenced by the changes in the protein-DES interactions and active sites.
Aqueous deep eutectic solvent (DES) solutions emerge as new media for biocatalysis. The large number of DESs provides a space for designing solutions with desired features. One challenge for this design is to understand the fundamental relationship between the water effect on biocatalysis and the DES compositions. We investigate the solvation and structure of a lipase protein in two DESs containing a protein destabilizer (choline : urea (1 : 2)) and stabilizer (choline : glycerol (1 : 2)) and their 1 : 1 aqueous solution using molecular dynamics simulations. The lipase protein in the pure aqueous solution is simulated as the reference. The lipase protein remains folded in both DESs and their aqueous solutions. In both DESs, water molecules weaken the solvation shell of the lipase protein by reducing the protein-DES hydrogen bond lifetimes. However, the water molecules change the surface area and conformation of the active site on the lipase protein differently in the two DESs. Our simulations indicate that the impact on active sites plays an important role in differentiating the effect of water on biocatalysis in aqueous DESs.

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