The importance of unsatisfied hydrogen bonding
potential on protein–protein interaction was studied.
Two alternate modes of dimerization (conventional and flipped
form) of an immunoglobulin light chain variable domain
(VL) were previously identified. In
the flipped form, interface residue Gln89 would have an
unsatisfied hydrogen bonding potential. Removal of this
Gln should render the flipped dimer as the more favorable
quaternary form. High resolution crystallographic studies
of the Q89A and Q89L mutants show, as we predicted, that
these proteins indeed form flipped dimers with very similar
interfaces. A small cavity is present in the Q89A mutant
that is reflected in the ∼100 times lower association
constant than found for the Q89L mutant. The association
constant of Q89A and Q89L proteins (4 × 106
M−1 and >108 M−1)
are 10- and 1,000-fold higher than that of the wild-type
protein that forms conventional dimers clearly showing
the energetic reasons for the flipped dimer formation.