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03/01/2017 10:42

Researchers Imitate Molecular Crowding in Cells

Reto Caluori Kommunikation & Marketing
Universität Basel

    Enzymes behave differently in a test tube compared with the molecular scrum of a living cell. Chemists from the University of Basel have now been able to simulate these confined natural conditions in artificial vesicles for the first time. As reported in the academic journal Small, the results are offering better insight into the development of nanoreactors and artificial organelles.

    The cell interior is densely crowded with hundreds of thousands of macromolecules like proteins, DNA, RNA and smaller molecules forming viscous water solution. In science, this constriction is called “molecular crowding”. The effect can lead to fundamental changes in several of a molecule's characteristics.

    The behavior of a “free” protein or enzyme in a test tube does not necessarily follow natural processes, as the cell provides high viscos environment and confined space. In the lab, it had previously only been possible to simulate confined space but not crowded milieu simultaneously.

    Imitating mother nature

    A team of researchers led by Professor Wolfgang Meier of the University of Basel has now developed a system that comes a significant step closer to the natural model, as for the first time it simulated the crowding effect inside a closed vesicle. “The environment inside a cell has a major effect on the chemical reactions that take place there, so we wanted to copy this in a way coming close to nature as possible,” said Professor Meier.

    To create the cellular surroundings, the researchers from the Department of Chemistry made nanoscopic vesicles, so-called polymersomes, and loaded these with the horseradish peroxidase enzyme and a highly viscous solution as crowding components. The kinetics of chemical reactions by a given enzyme could thus be determined for the first time, taking “molecular crowding” into account.The results show that both factors have a strong influence on enzymatic kinetics.

    Controlling the speed of chemical reactions

    “Our design takes into account the natural environmental factors that influence enzymes’ performance, and therefore brings us significantly further forward in the development of nanoreactors,” said Professor Meier. The results demonstrate that the behavior of enzymes can be specifically controlled using the crowding effect – an important factor in developing artificial organelles for enzyme replacement therapy.

    Original article

    Patric Baumann, Mariana Spulber, Ozana Fischer, Anja Car, Wolfgang Meier
    Investigation of horseradish peroxidase kinetics in an ‘organelle like’ environment
    Small (2017), doi: 10.1002/smll.201603943

    Further information

    Prof. Dr. Wolfgang P. Meier, University of Basel, Department of Chemistry, Tel. +41 61 207 38 02, Email: Wolfgang.Meier@unibas.ch


    Images

    Enzymatic reaction inside a nanoreactor, on the left in absence and of a crowding agent and on the right with molecular crowding.
    Enzymatic reaction inside a nanoreactor, on the left in absence and of a crowding agent and on the r ...
    Source: University of Basel, Department of Chemistry


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars, all interested persons
    Chemistry
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

    Enzymatic reaction inside a nanoreactor, on the left in absence and of a crowding agent and on the right with molecular crowding.


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