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The calorimetric criterion for a two-state process revisited
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 1999
Abstract
The “calorimetric criterion” is one of the important experimental approaches for determining whether protein folding is an “all-or-none” two-state transition (i.e., whether intermediates are present at equilibrium). The calorimetric criterion states that the equivalence of the “measured” calorimetric enthalpy change and the effective two-state van't Hoff enthalpy change demonstrates that there is a two-state transition. This paper addresses the essential question of whether the calorimetric criterion is a necessary and sufficient condition for a two-state process and shows that it is necessary but not sufficient by means of specific examples. Analysis of simple models indicates that the heat capacity curve, regardless of whether it originates from a two-state process or not, can always be decomposed in such a way that the calorimetric criterion is satisfied. Exact results for a three-state model and a homopolymer tetramer demonstrate that the deviation from the calorimetric criterion is not simply related to the population of intermediate states. Analysis of a three-helix bundle protein model, which has a two-state folding from a random coil to ordered (molten) globule, shows that the calorimetric criterion may not be satisfied if the standard linear interpolation of baselines (weighted or unweighted) is employed. A specific example also suggests that the more recently introduced deconvolution method is not necessarily better than the simple calorimetric criterion for distinguishing a two-state transition from a three-state transition. Although the calorimetric criterion is not a sufficient condition for a two-state process, it is likely to continue to be of practical utility, particularly when its results are shown to be consistent with those from other experimental methods.
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- Research Article
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- 1999 The Protein Society
- 94
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