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Reversible self-association of a human myeloma protein. Thermodynamics and relevance to viscosity effects and solubility

28

Citations

36

References

1984

Year

Abstract

Monoclonal IgG paraproteins associated with multiple myeloma, Felty's syndrome, and idiopathic cryoglobulinemia frequently produce disease due to a tendency to self-associate in vivo. The insolubility and viscosity effects of these proteins are of specific interest as molecular disease mechanisms. In sedimentation equilibrium studies at 21 degrees C an IgG1-lambda myeloma protein (IgG-MIT) associated with the hyperviscosity syndrome is shown to undergo a reversible polymerization reaction. On the basis of the theory and data-fitting methods of Adams and co-workers [Tang, L. H., Powell, D. R., Escott, B. M., & Adams, E. T., Jr. (1977) Biophys. Chem. 7, 121-139], the data are consistent with a nonideal cooperative indefinite (SEK type III) model self-association in which one equilibrium constant (K12 = 6.3 X 10(3) L/m) governs dimerization while another (K = 1.7 X 10(4) L/m) governs all subsequent additions of monomer to the polymer. Temperature effects on K12 and K between 11 and 30 degrees C suggest negative van't Hoff enthalpies for all association steps and a positive entropy change [delta S degree = 2.5 cal/(mol-deg)] for steps beyond the dimer. An increase in ionic strength from I = 0.03 to I = 0.18 promotes the polymerization of IgG-MIT through a marked increase in K while paradoxically enhancing bulk solubility. These results suggest that this self-association proceeds through a combination of weak nonionic and hydrophobic interactions. The enhancement of both polymerization and solubility by increased ionic strength suggests that the hyperviscosity induced by IgG-MIT results from its ability to form large, highly soluble polymers in serum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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