The mechanism of urea-induced protein denaturation is
explored
through studying the salting effect of urea on 14 amino acid side
chain analogues, and N-methylacetamide (NMA) which
mimics the protein backbone. The solvation free energies of the 15
molecules were calculated in pure water, aqueous urea, and NaCl solutions.
Our results show that NaCl displays strong capability to salt out
all 15 molecules, while urea facilitates the solvation (salting-in)
of all the 15 molecules on the other hand. The salting effect is found
to be largely enthalpy-driven for both NaCl and urea. Our observations
can explain the higher stability of protein’s secondary and
tertiary structures in typical salt solutions than that in pure water.
Meanwhile, urea’s capability to better solvate protein backbone
and side-chain components can be extrapolated to explain protein’s
denaturation in aqueous urea solution. Urea salts in molecules through
direct binding to solute surface, and the strength is linearly dependent
on the number of heavy atoms of solute molecules. The van der Waals
interactions are found to be the dominant force, which challenges
a hydrogen-bonding-driven mechanism proposed previously