Litcius/Paper detail

Molecular Crowding: The History and Development of a Scientific Paradigm

Caterina Alfano, Yann Fichou, Klaus Huber, Matthias Weiß, Evan Spruijt, Simon Ebbinghaus, Giuseppe De Luca, María Agnese Morando, Valeria Vetri, Piero Andrea Temussi, Annalisa Pastore

2024Chemical Reviews169 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It is now generally accepted that macromolecules do not act in isolation but "live" in a crowded environment, that is, an environment populated by numerous different molecules. The field of molecular crowding has its origins in the far 80s but became accepted only by the end of the 90s. In the present issue, we discuss various aspects that are influenced by crowding and need to consider its effects. This Review is meant as an introduction to the theme and an analysis of the evolution of the crowding concept through time from colloidal and polymer physics to a more biological perspective. We introduce themes that will be more thoroughly treated in other Reviews of the present issue. In our intentions, each Review may stand by itself, but the complete collection has the aspiration to provide different but complementary perspectives to propose a more holistic view of molecular crowding.

Topics & Concepts

CrowdingMacromolecular crowdingTheme (computing)Perspective (graphical)ChemistryNanotechnologyData scienceIsolation (microbiology)EpistemologyEngineering ethicsPsychologyComputer scienceNeuroscienceBioinformaticsBiologyArtificial intelligenceEngineeringWorld Wide WebPhilosophyMacromoleculeBiochemistryMaterials scienceLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorNanopore and Nanochannel Transport StudiesPolymer Surface Interaction Studies