Interfacial Water Ordering Is Insufficient to Explain Ice-Nucleating Protein Activity

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Abstract

Ice-nucleating proteins (INPs) found in bacteria are the most effective ice nucleators known, enabling the crystallization of water at temperatures close to 0 °C. Although their function has been known for decades, the underlying mechanism is still under debate. Here, we show that INPs from Pseudomonas syringae in aqueous solution exhibit a defined solution structure and show no significant conformational changes upon cooling. In contrast, irreversible structural changes are observed upon heating to temperatures exceeding ∼55 °C, leading to a loss of the ice-nucleation activity. Sum-frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy reveals that active and heat-inactivated INPs impose similar structural ordering of interfacial water molecules upon cooling. Our results demonstrate that increased water ordering is not sufficient to explain INPs' high ice-nucleation activity and confirm that intact three-dimensional protein structures are critical for bacterial ice nucleation, supporting a mechanism that depends on the INPs' supramolecular interactions.

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Lukas, M., Schwidetzky, R., Kunert, A. T., Backus, E. H. G., Pöschl, U., Fröhlich-Nowoisky, J., … Meister, K. (2021). Interfacial Water Ordering Is Insufficient to Explain Ice-Nucleating Protein Activity. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 12(1), 218–223. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c03163

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