Protein-matrix coupling/uncoupling in dry systems of photosynthetic reaction center embedded in trehalose/sucrose: the origin of trehalose peculiarity
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2008
abstract:
Trehalose is a nonreducing disaccharide of glucose found in organisms, which can survive adverse
conditions such as extreme drought and high temperatures. Furthermore, isolated structures, as enzymes
or liposomes, embedded in trehalose are preserved against stressing conditions [see, e.g., Crowe, L. M.
Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 2002, 131, 505-513]. Among other hypotheses, such protective effect has
been suggested to stem, in the case of proteins, from the formation of a water-mediated, hydrogen bond
network, which anchors the protein surface to the water-sugar matrix, thus coupling the internal degrees
of freedom of the biomolecule to those of the surroundings [Giuffrida, S.; et al. J. Phys. Chem. B 2003,
107, 13211-13217]. Analogous protective effect is also accomplished by other saccharides, although with
a lower efficiency. Here, we studied the recombination kinetics of the primary, light-induced charge separated
state (P+QA
-) and the thermal stability of the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of Rhodobacter
sphaeroides in trehalose-water and in sucrose-water matrixes of decreasing water content. Our data
show that, in sucrose, at variance with trehalose, the system undergoes a "nanophase separation" when
the water/sugar mole fraction is lower than the threshold level ~0.8. We rationalize this result assuming
that the hydrogen bond network, which anchors the RC surface to its surrounding, is formed in trehalose
but not in sucrose. We suggest that both the couplings, in the case of trehalose, and the nanophase
separation, in the case of sucrose, start at low water content when the components of the system enter in
competition for the residual water.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Mallardi, Antonia
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