The Denaturation of Lysozyme Layers Adsorbed at the Hydrophobic Solid/Liquid Surface Studied by Neutron Reflection.

We have studied the adsorption of lysozyme layers at a hydrophobic silicon water interface using specular neutron reflection. The hydrophobic surface was obtained by self-assembly of a densely packed monolayer of octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS) onto the natural silica layer on the smooth surface of a (111) silicon block. The effect of pH on the adsorbed lysozyme layer was examined at a constant lysozyme concentration of 0.03 g dm-3 and at a constant ionic strength of 0.02 M. Reflectivity profiles at different pH show that adsorption is irreversible with respect to pH, the composition and structure of the final layer being dependent on the route by which the pH was achieved. The adsorbed protein layer was found to divide into approximately two regions, a densely packed thin layer next to the OTS surface and a diffuse thicker layer extending into the bulk solution. None of the dimensions of this structure corresponds to those of the globular protein in solution, suggesting that, unlike its adsorption at the hydrophilic silica/water interface, lysozyme is denatured at the OTS/water surface. The irreversible adsorption is explained by the combined interaction of the hydrophobic attraction of the hydrophobic fragments in lysozyme to the OTS surface and electrostatic repulsion within the adsorbed layer. The hydrophobic surface induces the exposure of hydrophobic fragments from the lysozyme assembly. The thickness of the dense layer suggests that the denatured protein adsorbs in the form of peptide chains with the hydrophobic amino acid side chains attached to the OTS surface with the hydrophilic side chains extending into the bulk solution. Since lysozyme is more stable at pH 7 than at pH 4, the difference in initial adsorption is dominated by the greater relative stability of lysozyme to denaturation at the higher pH. A change of pH from 7 to 4 reduces the stability of the protein to unfolding and results in more adsorption than when the pH is changed in the opposite direction. Solution pH also affects the net charges within the hydrophilic tail region and the structural distribution of the tail region was found to vary with pH. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.

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