"Cool" Bacteria
New insights into a mechanism that reduces the ice formation ability of bacterial ice-nucleating proteins in an acidic environment.
Because of mild winters, ski resorts produce artificial snow to supplement the natural snowfall or extend the ski-season. Ice-nucleating proteins, extracted from the bacterium Pseudomonas syringae, can make ice better than any other known material and are already used in snow making. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research have now unraveled why an acidic environment can inhibit ice formation by these proteins.
Winters teach us that water freezes at approximately 0 ℃. However, very pure water freezes at much lower temperatures (around −37 ℃). Freezing at higher temperatures (close to 0 ℃) is supported by so-called “ice nucleators". These ice nucleators can be, for example, dust and soot particles or a special category of proteins - long chains of molecules containing amino acids, called ice-nucleating proteins.
Ice-nucleating proteins from the natural bacterium Pseudomonas syringae are the most efficient among the ice nucleators. Their ability to induce ice formation is well known and is commercially exploited for the production of artificial snow. However, these proteins have a dark origin: The bacterium is infamous for the deleterious effect - frostbites - it has on various crops. Acidic conditions are known to reduce the ability of these proteins to nucleate ice. The group of Konrad Meister, professor at the University of Alaska and group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, Germany, has now gained a deeper insight into the physical processes behind this effect.
To promote freezing, several of these ice-nucleating proteins need to arrange into a highly ordered structure around which water can freeze to ice. One basic principle driving this ordering process relies on the repulsion among individual proteins due to their net electric charge. Acidic conditions can reduce this repulsion, preventing the ice-nucleating proteins from organizing in the "right way", and instead favor the formation of a disordered aggregate. These disordered ice-nucleating proteins are incapable of forming ice at temperatures as high as they usually do (close to 0 °C).
"The overall aim of this study was to understand the fundamental mechanisms behind bacterial ice nucleation. However, the possibility of selectively decreasing the ice nucleation ability of these bacteria has direct application potential” says Max Lukas, main author of the study. "It would, for instance, be great if this knowledge could be used to reduce crop losses caused by frostbites, not least for grapes - a very important culture and food product in and around Mainz."
This study was made possible through a close collaboration with the neighboring Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and the results have been published in the “Journal of the American Chemical Society”.