posted on 2018-05-29, 00:00authored byAmy E. Rydeen, Eric M. Brustad, Gary J. Pielak
Cells survive fluctuations in osmolality
by accumulating and depleting
highly soluble, usually neutral, small organic compounds. Natural
selection has converged on a small set of such molecules, called osmolytes.
The biophysical characterization of osmolytes, with respect to proteins,
has centered on tertiary structure stability. Data about their effect
on protein assemblies, whose formation is driven by surface interactions,
is lacking. Here, we investigate the effects of osmolytes and related
molecules on the stabilities of a protein and a protein complex. The
results demonstrate that osmolytes are not differentiated from other
cosolutes by their stabilizing influences on protein tertiary structure
but by their compatibility with the interactions between protein surfaces
that organize the cellular interior.