4.6 Article

Putting life on ice: bacteria that bind to frozen water

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 13, Issue 121, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2016.0210

Keywords

ice-binding proteins; antifreeze proteins; biofilm; RTX adhesin; microfluidic cold finger; cold adaptation

Funding

  1. ERC
  2. ISF
  3. CIHR
  4. Lady Davis Fellowship Program
  5. Moskowitz Center for Nano and Bio-Nano Imaging at the Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ice-binding proteins (IBPs) are typically small, soluble proteins produced by cold-adapted organisms to help them avoid ice damage by either resisting or tolerating freezing. By contrast, the IBP of the Antarctic bacterium Marinomonas primoryensis is an extremely long, 1.5 MDa protein consisting of five different regions. The fourth region, a 34 kDa domain, is the only part that confers ice binding. Bioinfonnatic studies suggest that this IBP serves as an adhesin that attaches the bacteria to ice to keep it near the top of the water column, where oxygen and nutrients are available. Using temperature-controlled cells and a microfluidic apparatus, we show that M. primoryensis adheres to ice and is only released when melting occurs. Binding is dependent on the mobility of the bacterium and the functionality of the IBP domain. A polyclonal antibody raised against the IBP region blocks bacterial ice adhesion. This concept may be the basis for blocking biofilm formation in other bacteria, including pathogens. Currently, this IBP is the only known example of an adhesin that has evolved to bind ice.

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