Extremophile

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== Salty condition can be overcome with extra Negative surface charge density ==
== Salty condition can be overcome with extra Negative surface charge density ==
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The green alga Dunaliella salina lives in an environment where salt levels change swiftly and dramatically from low to high salt concentrations. The problem for its extra-cellular proteins is staying soluble in both solvents. Professors Sussman and Zamir from the Weizmann Institute report the first such protein crystal structure and suggest that the protein's relative increase of negative surface charge density turns the protein into a anion-like molecule capable of dissolving in high salt. However, unlike the halophilic enzyme from Haloarcula marismortui which Profs. Sussman and Maverach (Tel Aviv University) crystallized earlier, the negative surface charge is not so high that the protein becomes insoluble in lower salt concentrations. The three-way comparison between the salt-adapting properties of a mesophilic, halotolerant, and halophilic enzyme illuminates a biophysical strategy for tuning protein structures to extreme salt conditions.
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The green alga Dunaliella salina lives in an environment where salt levels change swiftly and dramatically from low to high salt concentrations (see an interesting Scientific American article about life in the Dead Sea of Israel [http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/artful-amoeba/2011/10/09/fountains-of-life-found-at-the-bottom-of-the-dead-sea/]). The problem for its extra-cellular proteins is staying soluble in both solvents. Professors Sussman and Zamir from the Weizmann Institute report the first such protein crystal structure and suggest that the protein's relative increase of negative surface charge density turns the protein into a anion-like molecule capable of dissolving in high salt. However, unlike the halophilic enzyme from Haloarcula marismortui which Profs. Sussman and Maverach (Tel Aviv University) crystallized earlier, the negative surface charge is not so high that the protein becomes insoluble in lower salt concentrations. The three-way comparison between the salt-adapting properties of a mesophilic, halotolerant, and halophilic enzyme illuminates a biophysical strategy for tuning protein structures to extreme salt conditions.
In the list below, the increasing negative charge density on the surface is apparent. Notice also that while the halotolerant enzyme (middle) switches positive amino acids to neutral, the halophilic enzyme (last), also switches neutral amino acids to become negative.
In the list below, the increasing negative charge density on the surface is apparent. Notice also that while the halotolerant enzyme (middle) switches positive amino acids to neutral, the halophilic enzyme (last), also switches neutral amino acids to become negative.

Revision as of 16:09, 25 April 2013

halophilic enzyme (PDB entry 1hlp)

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