10–13 Oct 2022
Europe/Paris timezone

Confinement due to crowding in biological cells

12 Oct 2022, 16:00
20m
Oral Contributions Talks

Speaker

judith peters

Description

The interior of biological cells corresponds to an environment, which is highly crowded. For instance, the total concentration of protein and RNA inside Escherichia coli is in the range 300−400 mg/mL [1]. Crowding can induce the confinement of molecular motions due to the restrictions in space. It is established that diffusion rates [2], but also activities, dynamics, aggregation or protein folding are influenced by crowding [1]. Here, we want to present new insights into the role of crowding and confinement with respect to extreme external conditions as low or high temperature, high hydrostatic pressure or salinity. Crowding influences the environmental viscosity, which in term can provoke confinement on molecular dynamics. Both together have a protective effect against stress induced by extreme conditions. One possibility for such studies is to investigate cells, which are used to live under extreme conditions, in their intact form and after cell lysis to extract the limiting effects on the molecular dynamics of the proteome and of water molecules [3]. Other opportunities are the studies of proteins under (self-) crowding conditions [4].

References
[1] R.J. Ellis, Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 11, 114 (2001).
[2] F. Roosen-Runge, M. Hennig, F. Zhang, R.M. Jacobs, M. Sztucki, H. Schober, T. Seydel, F. Schreiber, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 108, 11815 (2011).
[3] M. Golub et al., Langmuir 34, 10419 (2018).
[4] M. Erlkamp et al., J. Phys. Chem. B119, 4842−4848 (2015).

Primary author

judith peters

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