Siddiqui Khawar Sohail, Cavicchioli Ricardo
School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Annu Rev Biochem. 2006;75:403-33. doi: 10.1146/annurev.biochem.75.103004.142723.
By far the largest proportion of the Earth's biosphere is comprised of organisms that thrive in cold environments (psychrophiles). Their ability to proliferate in the cold is predicated on a capacity to synthesize cold-adapted enzymes. These enzymes have evolved a range of structural features that confer a high level of flexibility compared to thermostable homologs. High flexibility, particularly around the active site, is translated into low-activation enthalpy, low-substrate affinity, and high specific activity at low temperatures. High flexibility is also accompanied by a trade-off in stability, resulting in heat lability and, in the few cases studied, cold lability. This review addresses the structure, function, and stability of cold-adapted enzymes, highlighting the challenges for immediate and future consideration. Because of the unique properties of cold-adapted enzymes, they are not only an important focus in extremophile biology, but also represent a valuable model for fundamental research into protein folding and catalysis.
到目前为止,地球生物圈中最大比例的生物是那些在寒冷环境中茁壮成长的生物(嗜冷菌)。它们在寒冷环境中增殖的能力取决于合成适应低温的酶的能力。与耐热同源物相比,这些酶进化出了一系列赋予高度灵活性的结构特征。高度的灵活性,尤其是在活性位点周围,转化为低活化焓、低底物亲和力以及在低温下的高比活性。高度的灵活性还伴随着稳定性方面的权衡,导致热不稳定,并且在少数研究案例中,也存在冷不稳定。本综述探讨了适应低温的酶的结构、功能和稳定性,突出了亟待当下及未来考量的挑战。由于适应低温的酶具有独特的性质,它们不仅是极端微生物生物学的一个重要研究重点,而且还代表了蛋白质折叠和催化基础研究的一个有价值的模型。