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Mainly on the Plane: Deep Subsurface Bacterial Proteins Bind and Alter Clathrate Structure.

Abigail M JohnsonDustin J E HuardJongchan KimPriyam RautSheng DaiRaquel L LiebermanJennifer B Glass
Published in: Crystal growth & design (2020)
Gas clathrates are both a resource and a hindrance. They store massive quantities of natural gas but also can clog natural gas pipelines, with disastrous consequences. Eco-friendly technologies for controlling and modulating gas clathrate growth are needed. Type I Antifreeze Proteins (AFPs) from cold-water fish have been shown to bind to gas clathrates via repeating motifs of threonine and alanine. We tested whether proteins encoded in the genomes of bacteria native to natural gas clathrates bind to and alter clathrate morphology. We identified putative clathrate-binding proteins (CBPs) with multiple threonine/alanine motifs in a putative operon (cbp) in metagenomes from natural clathrate deposits. We recombinantly expressed and purified five CbpA proteins, four of which were stable, and experimentally confirmed that CbpAs bound to tetrahydrofuran (THF) clathrate, a low-pressure analogue for structure II gas clathrate. When grown in the presence of CbpAs, the THF clathrate was polycrystalline and platelike instead of forming single, octahedral crystals. Two CbpAs yielded branching clathrate crystals, similar to the effect of Type I AFP, while the other two produced hexagonal crystals parallel to the [1 1 1] plane, suggesting two distinct binding modes. Bacterial CBPs may find future utility in industry, such as maintaining a platelike structure during gas clathrate transportation.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • carbon dioxide
  • signaling pathway
  • ionic liquid
  • transcription factor
  • protein kinase
  • dna binding
  • current status