Knight C A, DeVries A L, Oolman L D
Nature. 1984;308(5956):295-6. doi: 10.1038/308295a0.
Antifreeze glycopeptide and peptides from the blood of polar fishes prevent the growth of ice crystals in water at temperatures down to approximately 1 degree C below freezing point, but do not appreciably influence the equilibrium freezing point. This freezing point hysteresis must be a disequilibrium effect, or it would violate Gibbs' phase rule, but the separate freezing and melting points are experimentally very definite: ice neither melts nor freezes perceptibly within the 'hysteresis gap', for periods of hours or days. We report here unusual crystal faces on ice crystals grown from solutions of very low concentrations of the anti-freeze glycopeptides and peptides. This is a clue to the mechanism of freezing inhibition, and it may be the basis of a simple, very sensitive test for antifreeze material. Very low concentrations of the antifreeze protein are also remarkably effective in preventing the recrystallization of ice.
来自极地鱼类血液中的抗冻糖肽和肽能在温度低至冰点以下约1摄氏度时防止水中冰晶的生长,但对平衡冰点没有明显影响。这种冰点滞后现象必定是一种非平衡效应,否则就会违反吉布斯相律,但单独的冰点和熔点在实验中非常明确:在“滞后间隙”内,冰晶在数小时或数天内既不会明显融化也不会明显冻结。我们在此报告,从极低浓度的抗冻糖肽和肽溶液中生长出的冰晶具有异常晶面。这是冷冻抑制机制的一个线索,可能是一种简单、非常灵敏的抗冻物质检测方法的基础。极低浓度的抗冻蛋白在防止冰的重结晶方面也非常有效。