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      Membranes Are Decisive for Maximum Freezing Efficiency of Bacterial Ice Nucleators

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          Abstract

          Ice-nucleating proteins (INPs) from Pseudomonas syringae are among the most active ice nucleators known, enabling ice formation at temperatures close to the melting point of water. The working mechanisms of INPs remain elusive, but their ice nucleation activity has been proposed to depend on the ability to form large INP aggregates. Here, we provide experimental evidence that INPs alone are not sufficient to achieve maximum freezing efficiency and that intact membranes are critical. Ice nucleation measurements of phospholipids and lipopolysaccharides show that these membrane components are not part of the active nucleation site but rather enable INP assembly. Substantially improved ice nucleation by INP assemblies is observed for deuterated water, indicating stabilization of assemblies by the stronger hydrogen bonds of D 2O. Together, these results show that the degree of order/disorder and the assembly size are critically important in determining the extent to which bacterial INPs can facilitate ice nucleation.

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          Most cited references35

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          Quantitative Evaluation of Experimental Results an the Heterogeneous Freezing Nucleation of Supercooled Liquids

          Gabor Vali (1971)
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            Antifreeze and ice nucleator proteins in terrestrial arthropods.

            J G Duman (2000)
            Terrestrial arthropods survive subzero temperatures by becoming either freeze tolerant (survive body fluid freezing) or freeze avoiding (prevent body fluid freezing). Protein ice nucleators (PINs), which limit supercooling and induce freezing, and antifreeze proteins (AFPs), which function to prevent freezing, can have roles in both freeze tolerance and avoidance. Many freeze-tolerant insects produce hemolymph PINs, which induce freezing at high subzero temperatures thereby inhibiting lethal intracellular freezing. Some freeze-tolerant species have AFPs that function as cryoprotectants to prevent freeze damage. Although the mechanism of this cryoprotection is not known, it may involve recrystallization inhibition and perhaps stabilization of the cell membrane. Freeze-avoiding species must prevent inoculative freezing initiated by external ice across the cuticle and extend supercooling abilities. Some insects remove PINs in the winter to promote supercooling, whereas others have selected against surfaces with ice-nucleating abilities on an evolutionary time scale. However, many freeze-avoiding species do have proteins with ice-nucleating activity, and these proteins must be masked in winter. In the beetle Dendroides canadensis, AFPs in the hemolymph and gut inhibit ice nucleators. Also, hemolymph AFPs and those associated with the layer of epidermal cells under the cuticle inhibit inoculative freezing. Two different insect AFPs have been characterized. One type from the beetles D. canadensis and Tenebrio molitor consists of 12- and 13-mer repeating units with disulfide bridges occurring at least every six residues. The spruce budworm AFP lacks regular repeat units. Both have much higher activities than any known AFPs.
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              Water activity as the determinant for homogeneous ice nucleation in aqueous solutions

              The unique properties of water in the supercooled (metastable) state are not fully understood. In particular, the effects of solutes and mechanical pressure on the kinetics of the liquid-to-solid phase transition of supercooled water and aqueous solutions to ice have remained unresolved. Here we show from experimental data that the homogeneous nucleation of ice from supercooled aqueous solutions is independent of the nature of the solute, but depends only on the water activity of the solution--that is, the ratio between the water vapour pressures of the solution and of pure water under the same conditions. In addition, we show that the presence of solutes and the application of pressure have a very similar effect on ice nucleation. We present a thermodynamic theory for homogeneous ice nucleation, which expresses the nucleation rate coefficient as a function of water activity and pressure. Recent observations from clouds containing ice are in good agreement with our theory and our results should help to overcome one of the main weaknesses of numerical models of the atmosphere, the formulation of cloud processes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Phys Chem Lett
                J Phys Chem Lett
                jz
                jpclcd
                The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
                American Chemical Society
                1948-7185
                01 November 2021
                11 November 2021
                : 12
                : 44
                : 10783-10787
                Affiliations
                []Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research , 55128 Mainz, Germany
                []Max Planck Institute for Chemistry , 55128 Mainz, Germany
                [§ ]University of Alaska Southeast , Juneau, Alaska 99801, United States
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1412-3557
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6851-8453
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1278-0054
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6853-6325
                Article
                10.1021/acs.jpclett.1c03118
                8591660
                34723523
                863ab5a7-7f0e-4a44-a3ba-ddf1e00102f1
                © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 22 September 2021
                : 26 October 2021
                Categories
                Letter
                Custom metadata
                jz1c03118
                jz1c03118

                Physical chemistry
                Physical chemistry

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