Anisotropic Interactions in Protein Mixtures: Self Assembly and Phase Behavior in Aqueous Solution

J Phys Chem Lett. 2012 Mar 15;3(6):731-4. doi: 10.1021/jz201680m. Epub 2012 Feb 28.

Abstract

Recent experimental studies show that oppositely charged proteins can self-assemble to form seemingly stable microspheres in aqueous salt solutions. We here use parallel tempering Monte Carlo simulations to study protein phase separation of lysozyme/α-lactalbumin mixtures and show that anisotropic electrostatic interactions are important for driving protein self-assembly. In both dilute and concentrated protein phases, the proteins strongly align according to their charge distribution. While this alignment can be greatly diminished by a single point mutation, phase separation is completely suppressed when neglecting electrostatic anisotropy. The results highlight the importance of subtle electrostatic interactions even in crowded biomolecular environments where other short-ranged forces are often thought to dominate.

Keywords: coarse graining; electrostatics; microsphere formation; noncentrosymmetric interactions; protein−protein interactions; whey proteins.