4.6 Review Book Chapter

Bacterial Osmoregulation: A Paradigm for the Study of Cellular Homeostasis

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF MICROBIOLOGY, VOL 65
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages 215-238

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-micro-090110-102815

Keywords

osmotic stress; compatible solute; preferential interactions; macromolecular crowding; protein-nucleic acid interactions; osmosensing transporter

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To thrive, cells must control their own physical and chemical properties. This process is known as cellular homeostasis. The dilute solutions traditionally favored by experimenters do not simulate the cytoplasm, where macromolecular crowding and preferential interactions among constituents may dominate critical processes. Solutions that do simulate cytoplasmic conditions are now being characterized. Corresponding cytoplasmic properties can be varied systematically by imposing osmotic stress. This osmotic stress approach is revealing how cytoplasmic properties modulate protein folding and protein-nucleic acid interactions. Results suggest that cytoplasmic homeostasis may require adjustments to multiple, interwoven cytoplasmic properties. Osmosensory transporters with diverse structures and bioenergetic mechanisms activate in response to osmotic stress as other proteins inactivate. These transporters are serving as paradigms for the study of in vivo protein-solvent interactions. Experimenters have proposed three different osmosensory mechanisms. Distinct mechanisms may exist, or these proposals may reflect different perceptions of a single, unifying mechanism.

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