| Literature DB >> 30897330 |
Marco Grimaldo1, Hender Lopez1,2,3, Christian Beck1,2, Felix Roosen-Runge4, Martine Moulin1, Juliette M Devos1, Valerie Laux1, Michael Härtlein1, Stefano Da Vela2, Ralf Schweins1, Alessandro Mariani5, Fajun Zhang2, Jean-Louis Barrat3, Martin Oettel2, V Trevor Forsyth1,6, Tilo Seydel1, Frank Schreiber2.
Abstract
The interior of living cells is a dense and polydisperse suspension of macromolecules. Such a complex system challenges an understanding in terms of colloidal suspensions. As a fundamental test we employ neutron spectroscopy to measure the diffusion of tracer proteins (immunoglobulins) in a cell-like environment (cell lysate) with explicit control over crowding conditions. In combination with Stokesian dynamics simulation, we address protein diffusion on nanosecond time scales where hydrodynamic interactions dominate over negligible protein collisions. We successfully link the experimental results on these complex, flexible molecules with coarse-grained simulations providing a consistent understanding by colloid theories. Both experiments and simulations show that tracers in polydisperse solutions close to the effective particle radius Reff = ⟨ Ri3⟩1/3 diffuse approximately as if the suspension was monodisperse. The simulations further show that macromolecules of sizes R > Reff ( R < Reff) are slowed more (less) effectively even at nanosecond time scales, which is highly relevant for a quantitative understanding of cellular processes.Year: 2019 PMID: 30897330 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b00345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-7185 Impact factor: 6.475