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Title: Locking out water at 100°C

Journal Article · · Biophysical Journal
ORCiD logo [1]
  1. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN (United States); Oak Ridge National Lab. (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States)

We report that thermophilic proteins, present in organisms that live at high temperatures, denature at much higher temperatures compared with their mesophilic counterparts. How these proteins stand the heat has long been researched and is particularly interesting because homologous pairs of thermophilic and mesophilic proteins show a high degree of structural and sequence similarity. In early studies of thermophilic proteins, the proportion of solvent-accessible charged residues was found to be increased at the expense of polar residues. Further analyses confirmed this and also noted strengthening of hydrophobic cores by branched apolar residues. At the same time, whether thermophilic proteins actually need to be more or less flexible than their mesophilic counterparts and the potential usefulness of surface loop deletion has been debated.

Research Organization:
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC05-00OR22725
OSTI ID:
1860588
Journal Information:
Biophysical Journal, Journal Name: Biophysical Journal Journal Issue: 17 Vol. 120; ISSN 0006-3495
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (8)

How do thermophilic proteins deal with heat? journal August 2001
Engineering proteins for thermostability through rigidifying flexible sites journal March 2014
Mesophilic Pyrophosphatase Function at High Temperature: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study journal July 2020
Structural basis for the hyperthermostability of an archaeal enzyme induced by succinimide formation journal September 2021
Entropic contribution to enhanced thermal stability in the thermostable P450 CYP119 journal October 2018
Structural and Genomic Correlates of Hyperthermostability journal October 2000
Genomic Correlates of Hyperthermostability, an Update journal May 2003
Protein Dynamics and Stability: The Distribution of Atomic Fluctuations in Thermophilic and Mesophilic Dihydrofolate Reductase Derived Using Elastic Incoherent Neutron Scattering journal June 2008