The Hofmeister Series is a useful metric in understanding how to precipate proteins. However, wikipedia and many other source indicate that the order of the series is rather empirical. I'm curious about the variety of explanations of the mechanism of the series as well as the application of the series to other non-protein macromolecules.
2 Answers
The molecular origin of the Hofmeister series is not well understood and still a very active area of research. For example, see the upcoming Faraday discussion conference. The syllabus for the conference says:
Although it is now clear that the Hofmeister series is intimately connected with ion hydration in homogeneous and heterogeneous environments and with ion pairing, the molecular origin of these effects has been poorly understood. Biochemists and physical chemists have been typically using the term Hofmeister series to put a label on ion specific behaviour in various environments, rather than to reach a molecular level understanding and, consequently, an ability to predict a particular effect of a specific salt ion.
(So, this is not an answer, but rather too long for a comment…)
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$\begingroup$ Actually, I think this is an answer, and a good one, as it records something useful about our state of knowledge. And that is useful to do here. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 9, 2014 at 21:34
A similar effect occurs in synthetic polymers. poly(N-isopropyl Acrylamide), (usually just p(NIPAM)) is a thermosensitive polymer. At room temperature, it dissolves easily in water. When you heat the solution past a certain temperature (the "lower critical solution temperature," or LCST) the polymer chains undergo a conformational change and precipitate out of solution. When you cool the solution back down below the LCST, the polmer returns to its original conformation and re-dissolves.
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp0690603 and http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja0546424 are two papers from a group at Texas A&M that show that the Hofmeister series applies to these thermosensitive polymers in a similar manner. In this case, the ions lower the LCST. So even at room temperature, you could salt out the polymer with enough salt. The Hofmeister series indicates the efficacy of the ions in this salting out.
Those papers divide the ions in the Hofmeister series into "chaotropes" and "kosmotropes," depending on whether the ion tends to break apart the natural structure of the water, or tends to stabilize the natural structure of the water. They claim that the chaotropes operate by changing the surface tension of the water and by direct anion binding to the polymer, and that the kosmotropes operate through surface tension and by changing the polarization of the water molecules. They correlate the magnitude of the effect of each ion on LCST with that ion's hydration entropy and surface tension increment.
Caveats: I'm only really comfortable with p(NIPAM) itself, and with the empirical fact of the salt effect. I don't know how well-understood these entropies of hydration or surface tension increments are, or if this would apply to salting-out of proteins.