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== Salty conditions can be overcome with extra negative surface charge density ==
== Salty conditions can be overcome with extra negative surface charge density ==
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The green alga ''Dunaliella salina'' lives in the Dead Sea of Israel where water currents can change its environment swiftly and dramatically from low to high salt concentrations (see an interesting ''Scientific American'' article about life in the Dead Sea [http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/artful-amoeba/2011/10/09/fountains-of-life-found-at-the-bottom-of-the-dead-sea/]). The problem for its proteins is staying soluble in both solvents. In 2005, Professors Sussman and Zamir from the Weizmann Institute reported the first crystal structure for such a protein - a <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/Carbonic_anhydrase/1'>halotolerant carbonic anhydrase</scene> ([[1y7w]]) - 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 <scene name='Extremophile/1hlp_secondary/2'>halophilic malate/lactate dehydrogenase</scene> ([[1hlp]]) 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 the Dead Sea of Israel where water currents can change its environment swiftly and dramatically from low to high salt concentrations. The problem for its proteins is staying soluble in both solvents.
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In the list below, the increasing negative charge density on the surface is apparent. Notice also that while the halotolerant enzyme only switches positive amino acids to neutral, the halophilic enzyme also switches neutral amino acids to become negative.
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In 2005, Scientists from the Weizmann Institute reported the first crystal structure for the first halotolerant enzyme, a - a <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/Carbonic_anhydrase/1'>carbonic anhydrase</scene> ([[1y7w]]), having solved in 1995 (together with scientists from Tel Aviv University) the structure of the first halophilic enzyme, a <scene name='Extremophile/1hlp_secondary/2'>malate/lactate dehydrogenase</scene> ([[1hlp]]) from ''Haloarcula marismortui''.
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/1raz/1'>''mesophilic'' carbonic anhydrase with "normal" amount of positively- and negatively-charged regions</scene> [[1raz]]
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They conclude that a general solution for remaining soluble in salty conditions it to become "anion-like" through increasing the negative charge surface density. In the list below, notice how the negative surface charge density increases from the mesophiles, to the halotolerant, and to the halophilic enzyme. Also notice how in the halotolerant enzyme only the the number of positively charged amino acids is less than its mesophilic homologue, but the halophilic enzyme additionally has more negatively charged amino acids than its mesophilic homologue.
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/1y7w/1'>''halotolerant'' carbonic anhydrase with less positively-charged regions but normal amount of positively-charged regions</scene> [[1y7w]]
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/Mesophile_dehydrogenase/2'>''mesophilic'' malate/lactate dehydrogenase with "normal" amount of positively- and negatively-charged regions</scene>[[1ldm]]
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/1raz/1'>''mesophilic'' carbonic anhydrase </scene> [[1raz]] with "normal" amount of positively- and negatively-charged regions
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/1hlp/1'>''halophilic'' malate/lactate dehydrogenase with less positively-charged regions and more positively-charged regions</scene> [[1hlp]]
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/1y7w/1'>''halotolerant'' carbonic anhydrase </scene> [[1y7w]] with less positively-charged regions but normal amount of positively-charged regions
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/Mesophile_dehydrogenase/2'>''mesophilic'' malate/lactate dehydrogenase </scene>[[1ldm]] with "normal" amount of positively- and negatively-charged regions
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* <scene name='JMS/sandbox9/1hlp/1'>''halophilic'' malate/lactate dehydrogenase </scene> [[1hlp]] with less positively-charged regions and more positively-charged regions
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In a nutshell, the problem of salty condition includes the problem of how to remain soluble; the general solution is to become anion-like through increasing the negative charge surface density; and the molecular implementation is through decreasing the relative amount of positively charged amino acids and/or increasing the relative amount of negatively charged amino acids.
 
{{Clear}}
{{Clear}}
== High temperatures encourage using proline to lower entropy loss and between-chain ion-network bonding to increase enthalpy gain ==
== High temperatures encourage using proline to lower entropy loss and between-chain ion-network bonding to increase enthalpy gain ==

Revision as of 10:30, 9 May 2013

halophilic enzyme (PDB entry 1hlp)

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Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Joseph M. Steinberger

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