3.9 Article

Structural adaptation of extreme halophilic proteins through decrease of conserved hydrophobic contact surface

Journal

BMC STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6807-11-50

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Funding

  1. italian Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Universita e della Ricerca

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Background: Halophiles are extremophilic microorganisms growing optimally at high salt concentrations. There are two strategies used by halophiles to maintain proper osmotic pressure in their cytoplasm: accumulation of molar concentrations of potassium and chloride with extensive adaptation of the intracellular macromolecules (salt-in strategy) or biosynthesis and/or accumulation of organic osmotic solutes (osmolyte strategy). Our work was aimed at contributing to the understanding of the shared molecular mechanisms of protein haloadaptation through a detailed and systematic comparison of a sample of several three-dimensional structures of halophilic and non-halophilic proteins. Structural differences observed between the salt-in and the mesophilic homologous proteins were contrasted to those observed between the osmolyte and mesophilic pairs. Results: The results suggest that haloadaptation strategy in the presence of molar salt concentration, but not of osmolytes, necessitates a weakening of the hydrophobic interactions, in particular at the level of conserved hydrophobic contacts. Weakening of these interactions counterbalances their strengthening by the presence of salts in solution and may help the structure preventing aggregation and/or loss of function in hypersaline environments. Conclusions: Considering the significant increase of biotechnology applications of halophiles, the understanding of halophilicity can provide the theoretical basis for the engineering of proteins of great interest because stable at concentrations of salts that cause the denaturation or aggregation of the majority of macromolecules.

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