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Toward Understanding Bacterial Ice Nucleation

Max Lukas, Ralph Schwidetzky, Rosemary J. Eufemio, Mischa Bonn, Konrad Meister

2022The Journal of Physical Chemistry B86 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial ice nucleators (INs) are among the most effective ice nucleators known and are relevant for freezing processes in agriculture, the atmosphere, and the biosphere. Their ability to facilitate ice formation is due to specialized ice-nucleating proteins (INPs) anchored to the outer bacterial cell membrane, enabling the crystallization of water at temperatures up to -2 °C. In this Perspective, we highlight the importance of functional aggregation of INPs for the exceptionally high ice nucleation activity of bacterial ice nucleators. We emphasize that the bacterial cell membrane, as well as environmental conditions, is crucial for a precise functional INP aggregation. Interdisciplinary approaches combining high-throughput droplet freezing assays with advanced physicochemical tools and protein biochemistry are needed to link changes in protein structure or protein-water interactions with changes on the functional level.

Topics & Concepts

Ice nucleusBacterial cell structureNucleationChemistryCrystallizationBiosphereBiophysicsIce formationChemical physicsBacteriaNanotechnologyChemical engineeringMaterials scienceEcologyBiologyGeologyAtmospheric sciencesOrganic chemistryGeneticsEngineeringnanoparticles nucleation surface interactionsPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsFreezing and Crystallization Processes
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