Entropy—enthalpy compensation: Fact or artifact?

The phenomenon of entropy–enthalpy (S‐H) compensation is widely invoked as an explanatory principle in thermodynamic analyses of proteins, ligands, and nucleic acids. It has been suggested that this compensation is an intrinsic property of either complex, fluctuating, or aqueous systems. The questio...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inProtein science Vol. 10; no. 3; pp. 661 - 667
Main Author Sharp, Kim
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 01.03.2001
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Summary:The phenomenon of entropy–enthalpy (S‐H) compensation is widely invoked as an explanatory principle in thermodynamic analyses of proteins, ligands, and nucleic acids. It has been suggested that this compensation is an intrinsic property of either complex, fluctuating, or aqueous systems. The questions examined here are whether the observed compensation is extra‐thermodynamic (i.e., reflects anything more than the well‐known laws of statistical thermodynamics) and if so, what does it reveal about the system? Compensation is rather variably defined in the literature and different usages are discussed. The most precise and interesting one, which is considered here, is a linear relationship between ΔH and ΔS for some series of perturbations or changes in experimental variable. Some recent thermodynamic data on proteins purporting to show compensation is analyzed and shown to be better explained by other causes. A general statistical mechanical model of a complex system is analyzed to explore whether and under what conditions extra‐thermodynamic compensation can occur and what it reveals about the system. This model shows that the most likely behavior to be seen is linear S‐H compensation over a rather limited range of perturbations with a compensation temperature Tc = dΔH/dΔS within 20% of the experimental temperature. This behavior is insensitive to the details of the model, thus revealing little extra‐thermodynamic or causal information about the system. In addition, it will likely be difficult to distinguish this from more trivial forms of compensation in real experimental systems.
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Reprint requests to: Kim Sharp, Johnson Research Foundation, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA ; e-mail: sharpk@mail.med.upenn.edu; fax: 215-898-4217.
Article and publication are at www.proteinscience.org/cgi/doi/10.1110/
ISSN:0961-8368
1469-896X
DOI:10.1110/ps.37801