eLife (May 2015)

The biological function of an insect antifreeze protein simulated by molecular dynamics

  • Michael J Kuiper,
  • Craig J Morton,
  • Sneha E Abraham,
  • Angus Gray-Weale

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.05142
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) protect certain cold-adapted organisms from freezing to death by selectively adsorbing to internal ice crystals and inhibiting ice propagation. The molecular details of AFP adsorption-inhibition is uncertain but is proposed to involve the Gibbs–Thomson effect. Here we show by using unbiased molecular dynamics simulations a protein structure-function mechanism for the spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana AFP, including stereo-specific binding and consequential melting and freezing inhibition. The protein binds indirectly to the prism ice face through a linear array of ordered water molecules that are structurally distinct from the ice. Mutation of the ice binding surface disrupts water-ordering and abolishes activity. The adsorption is virtually irreversible, and we confirm the ice growth inhibition is consistent with the Gibbs–Thomson law.

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