Ionic Liquid-Induced
Modulation of Ubiquitin Stability:
The Dominant Role of Hydrophobic Interactions
Posted on 2025-03-01 - 16:03
Despite the widespread use of imidazolium-based ionic
liquids (ILs)
in biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, and green chemistry, their detailed
interactions with proteins, particularly affecting structural stability,
remain poorly understood. This study examines the effects of ILs on
ubiquitin, a thermodynamically robust protein with a β-grasp
structure. We found that IL-induced destabilization follows a consistent
order with previous findings: [BMIM]+ > [BMPyr]+ > [EMIM]+ for cations and [BF4]− > [MeSO4]− > [Cl]− for anions. Through pH and ionic strength-dependent
studies, we
observed that hydrophobic interactions predominantly influence the
stability of positively charged ubiquitin, with electrostatic interactions
playing a secondary role. NMR studies identified residues impacted
by [BMIM][BF4]; however, site-directed mutagenesis of these
residues showed minimal changes in destabilization, suggesting a global
effect. This led us to conduct a broader empirical analysis, incorporating
solvent-accessible surface area evaluations, which confirmed that
hydrophobic residues are the primary drivers of stability alterations
in ubiquitin, with charged residues playing a minimal role. Additionally,
single-molecule force spectroscopy results indicate that imidazolium
ILs lower the unfolding barrier without altering the transition state
structure, offering insights into protein folding dynamics. ILs appear
to modulate the stability landscape of proteins by energetically and
kinetically favoring the unfolded state over the folded state. These
insights offer potential strategies for the selective tuning of protein
stability, which could be exploited to modulate protein–protein
or protein–substrate interactions in various applications of
ILs.
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Shrivastava, Aditya; Kamma, Harika; Das, Ranabir; Ainavarapu, Sri Rama Koti (2025). Ionic Liquid-Induced
Modulation of Ubiquitin Stability:
The Dominant Role of Hydrophobic Interactions. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.4c03886