Analysis of thermal melting curves represents one
important approach for evaluating protein stability and
the consequences of amino acid substitution on protein
structure. By use of the van't Hoff relationship,
the differential melting curve can be robustly
fit to only three parameters, two of which are the underlying
physical constants of melting temperature
(Tm) and van't Hoff enthalpy
(ΔHvH). Calculated
Tm and ΔHvH
values are insensitive to the choice of pre- and post-transition
baselines. Consequently, the method accurately computes
Tm and ΔHvH
for extremely truncated data sets, in the complete absence of baseline
information, and for proteins with low melting temperatures, where the
traditional direct approach routinely fails. Moreover, agreement between
ΔHvH values obtained using points derived
from pre- vs. post-transition data provide an independent
method for detecting some classes of non-two-state transitions.
Finally, fitting of the differential denaturation curve
should prove useful for analysis of abbreviated data sets
obtained from high throughput array analysis of protein stability.