Entropic effects enable life at extreme temperatures
Author(s) -
Young Hun Kim,
Geoffray Leriche,
Karthik Diraviyam,
Takaoki Koyanagi,
Kaifu Gao,
David Onofrei,
Joseph P. Patterson,
Anirvan Guha,
Nathan C. Gianneschi,
Gregory P. Holland,
Michael K. Gilson,
Michael Mayer,
David Sept,
Jerry Yang
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aaw4783
Subject(s) - archaea , extreme environment , function (biology) , tethering , biochemical engineering , biology , biological system , biophysics , environmental science , evolutionary biology , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , bacteria , engineering
Maintaining membrane integrity is a challenge at extreme temperatures. Biochemical synthesis of membrane-spanning lipids is one adaptation that organisms such as thermophilic archaea have evolved to meet this challenge and preserve vital cellular function at high temperatures. The molecular-level details of how these tethered lipids affect membrane dynamics and function, however, remain unclear. Using synthetic monolayer-forming lipids with transmembrane tethers, here, we reveal that lipid tethering makes membrane permeation an entropically controlled process that helps to limit membrane leakage at elevated temperatures relative to bilayer-forming lipid membranes. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations support a view that permeation through membranes made of tethered lipids reduces the torsional entropy of the lipids and leads to tighter lipid packing, providing a molecular interpretation for the increased transition-state entropy of leakage.
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