Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.

Cold-adaptation strategies have been studied in multiple psychrophilic organisms, especially for psychrophilic enzymes. Decreased enzyme activity caused by low temperatures as well as a higher viscosity of the aqueous environment require certain adaptations to the metabolic machinery of the cell. In...

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Main Authors: Tim Kahlke, Steinar Thorvaldsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3524096?pdf=render
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author Tim Kahlke
Steinar Thorvaldsen
author_facet Tim Kahlke
Steinar Thorvaldsen
author_sort Tim Kahlke
collection DOAJ
description Cold-adaptation strategies have been studied in multiple psychrophilic organisms, especially for psychrophilic enzymes. Decreased enzyme activity caused by low temperatures as well as a higher viscosity of the aqueous environment require certain adaptations to the metabolic machinery of the cell. In addition to this, low temperature has deleterious effects on the lipid bilayer of bacterial membranes and therefore might also affect the embedded membrane proteins. Little is known about the adaptation of membrane proteins to stresses of the cold. In this study we investigate a set of 66 membrane proteins from the core genome of the bacterial family Vibrionaceae to identify general characteristics that discern psychrophilic and mesophilic membrane proteins. Bioinformatical and statistical methods were used to analyze the alignments of the three temperature groups mesophilic, intermediate and psychrophilic. Surprisingly, our results show little or no adaptation to low temperature for those parts of the proteins that are predicted to be inside the membrane. However, changes in amino acid composition and hydrophobicity are found for complete sequences and sequence parts outside the lipid bilayer. Among others, the results presented here indicate a preference for helix-breaking and destabilizing amino acids Ile, Asp and Thr and an avoidance of the helix-forming amino acid Ala in the amino acid composition of psychrophilic membrane proteins. Furthermore, we identified a lower overall hydrophobicity of psychrophilic membrane proteins in comparison to their mesophilic homologs. These results support the stability-flexibility hypothesis and link the cold-adaptation strategies of membrane proteins to those of loop regions of psychrophilic enzymes.
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spelling doaj.art-ce6106a59b89426a816c06c617d646a92022-12-22T03:41:14ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5176110.1371/journal.pone.0051761Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.Tim KahlkeSteinar ThorvaldsenCold-adaptation strategies have been studied in multiple psychrophilic organisms, especially for psychrophilic enzymes. Decreased enzyme activity caused by low temperatures as well as a higher viscosity of the aqueous environment require certain adaptations to the metabolic machinery of the cell. In addition to this, low temperature has deleterious effects on the lipid bilayer of bacterial membranes and therefore might also affect the embedded membrane proteins. Little is known about the adaptation of membrane proteins to stresses of the cold. In this study we investigate a set of 66 membrane proteins from the core genome of the bacterial family Vibrionaceae to identify general characteristics that discern psychrophilic and mesophilic membrane proteins. Bioinformatical and statistical methods were used to analyze the alignments of the three temperature groups mesophilic, intermediate and psychrophilic. Surprisingly, our results show little or no adaptation to low temperature for those parts of the proteins that are predicted to be inside the membrane. However, changes in amino acid composition and hydrophobicity are found for complete sequences and sequence parts outside the lipid bilayer. Among others, the results presented here indicate a preference for helix-breaking and destabilizing amino acids Ile, Asp and Thr and an avoidance of the helix-forming amino acid Ala in the amino acid composition of psychrophilic membrane proteins. Furthermore, we identified a lower overall hydrophobicity of psychrophilic membrane proteins in comparison to their mesophilic homologs. These results support the stability-flexibility hypothesis and link the cold-adaptation strategies of membrane proteins to those of loop regions of psychrophilic enzymes.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3524096?pdf=render
spellingShingle Tim Kahlke
Steinar Thorvaldsen
Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.
PLoS ONE
title Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.
title_full Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.
title_fullStr Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.
title_full_unstemmed Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.
title_short Molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the Vibrionaceae core-genome.
title_sort molecular characterization of cold adaptation of membrane proteins in the vibrionaceae core genome
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3524096?pdf=render
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