Institut Laue-Langevin, Grenoble, France.
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Biofilms-Research Center for Biointerfaces (BRCB), Faculty of Health and Society, Malmö University, Sweden.
Chemphyschem. 2020 Aug 18;21(16):1742-1767. doi: 10.1002/cphc.202000162. Epub 2020 Jul 20.
Ions are ubiquitous in nature. They play a key role for many biological processes on the molecular scale, from molecular interactions, to mechanical properties, to folding, to self-organisation and assembly, to reaction equilibria, to signalling, to energy and material transport, to recognition etc. Going beyond monovalent ions to multivalent ions, the effects of the ions are frequently not only stronger (due to the obviously higher charge), but qualitatively different. A typical example is the process of binding of multivalent ions, such as Ca , to a macromolecule and the consequences of this ion binding such as compaction, collapse, potential charge inversion and precipitation of the macromolecule. Here we review these effects and phenomena induced by multivalent ions for biological (macro)molecules, from the "atomistic/molecular" local picture of (potentially specific) interactions to the more global picture of phase behaviour including, e. g., crystallisation, phase separation, oligomerisation etc. Rather than attempting an encyclopedic list of systems, we rather aim for an embracing discussion using typical case studies. We try to cover predominantly three main classes: proteins, nucleic acids, and amphiphilic molecules including interface effects. We do not cover in detail, but make some comparisons to, ion channels, colloidal systems, and synthetic polymers. While there are obvious differences in the behaviour of, and the relevance of multivalent ions for, the three main classes of systems, we also point out analogies. Our attempt of a comprehensive discussion is guided by the idea that there are not only important differences and specific phenomena with regard to the effects of multivalent ions on the main systems, but also important similarities. We hope to bridge physico-chemical mechanisms, concepts of soft matter, and biological observations and connect the different communities further.
离子在自然界中无处不在。它们在分子水平上对许多生物过程起着关键作用,从分子相互作用、机械性能、折叠、自组织和组装、反应平衡、信号传递、能量和物质传输、识别等。从单价离子到多价离子,离子的作用不仅更加强烈(由于电荷明显更高),而且性质也不同。一个典型的例子是多价离子(如 Ca )与大分子的结合过程,以及这种离子结合所带来的压缩、崩溃、潜在电荷反转和大分子沉淀等后果。在这里,我们综述了多价离子对生物(大)分子的这些影响和现象,从(潜在特定)相互作用的“原子/分子”局部图景到包括结晶、相分离、寡聚化等更全局的相行为图景。我们不是试图列出一个百科全书式的系统列表,而是旨在通过典型的案例研究进行全面的讨论。我们主要涵盖三类:蛋白质、核酸和两亲分子,包括界面效应。我们没有详细讨论,但与离子通道、胶体系统和合成聚合物进行了一些比较。虽然多价离子对这三类系统的行为和相关性有明显的差异,但我们也指出了一些相似之处。我们对全面讨论的尝试是基于这样一种想法,即多价离子对主要系统的影响不仅有重要的差异和特定的现象,而且还有重要的相似之处。我们希望弥合物理化学机制、软物质概念和生物观察之间的差距,并进一步连接不同的社区。