Structural studies of the hipersaline adaptation of proteins belonging to halophilic archaea


Autoria(s): Ortega Quintanilla, Gabriel
Contribuinte(s)

Millet Aguilar-Galindo, Oscar

Bioquímica y Biología Molecular;;Biokimika eta Biologia Molekularra

Data(s)

24/11/2015

24/11/2015

05/10/2015

05/10/2015

Resumo

183 p.

Adaptation of organisms to extreme halophilic environments (> 1 ¿ 2 M) occurs through theaccumulation of large intracellular concentrations of KCl. Their major adaptive feature is theextensive modification of the constituting proteome. A biased set of amino acids is selected inorder to improve the stability and solubility of halophilic proteins: large hydrophobic residuesare penalized, specially lysines, whereas small, polar and often negatively charged residuesare favoured, such as aspartic acid, threonine and glutamic acid (Figure I4). Themodifications occur mainly at the surface, so the overall structure is conserved. Themolecular determinants for such a selection remain elusive despite of considerable efforts.Previous models based on weak unspecific K+¿carboxylate interactions have provedthemselves insufficient to explain some features of haloadaptation, such as the complex saltmodulationof enzymatic activity or the dependence of protein stability with Hofmeister anions.Figure I4. Halophilic amino acid composition. Residue abundance in halophilic proteins compared tomesophilic proteins expressed as the percentage of relative variation in the average amino acidcomposition.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10810/16172

616634

13917

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

(cc)2015 GABRIEL ORTEGA QUINTANILLA (cc by-nc 4.0)

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #nuclear magnetic resonance #molecular biology #proteins #resonancia magnética nuclear #bioquímica molecular #proteínas
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis