| Literature DB >> 33523159 |
Wojciech Mikołaj Śmigiel1, Pauline Lefrançois1, Bert Poolman1.
Abstract
The bottom-up construction of synthetic cells from molecular components is arguably one of the most challenging areas of research in the life sciences. We review the impact of confining biological systems in synthetic vesicles. Complex cell-like systems require control of the internal pH, ionic strength, (macro)molecular crowding, redox state and metabolic energy conservation. These physicochemical parameters influence protein activity and need to be maintained within limits to ensure the system remains in steady-state. We present the physicochemical considerations for building synthetic cells with dimensions ranging from the smallest prokaryotes to eukaryotic cells.Entities:
Keywords: bottom-up synthetic cells; macromolecular crowding; membrane reconstitution; physicochemical homeostasis; synthetic biochemistry; vesicles
Year: 2019 PMID: 33523159 PMCID: PMC7289010 DOI: 10.1042/ETLS20190017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Top Life Sci ISSN: 2397-8554
Figure 1.Schematic representation of physicochemical effects at different scales.
The main physicochemical parameters and compartmentalization of the vesicle lumen are indicated on the left; two scenarios of crowding are indicated on the right, with a non-crowded situation on the top and a crowded case on the bottom. Schematic of the influence of macromolecular crowding on protein activity, adapted from [22], is indicated in the bottom panel.
Figure 4.Schematic representation of the arginine breakdown pathway fueling ATP production inside vesicles.
Figure 2.Discoidal and filamentous structures offer a better scaling of surface area with volume than spheres.
Graph showing the dependence of the surface-to-volume ratio on volume of spherical (black line) and cylindrical (yellow, cyan, green and orange lines) compartments. Arrows on the black line indicate the arbitrary division of small (<2 µm diameter) and big (>2 µm diameter) vesicles. Base diameters of the cylinders were fixed at 0.8 µm (yellow) and 0.3 µm (cyan) to represent cell-size filaments and lipid nanotubes, respectively. For green and orange lines, cylinder heights were fixed at 1 µm and 0.3 µm, respectively, to represent discoidal cells. Arrows on the x-axis indicate volumes of several organisms: P. ubique (0.01 µm3, [63]), E. coli (1.1 µm3; BNID:100004), haploid Saccharomyces cerevisiae (37 µm3; BNID:100430) and HeLa (940 µm3; BNID:106664) cells. The surface-to-volume ratio for a sphere is given by the equation: A/V = 3/(3V/4π)1/3; for a cylinder with a fixed base diameter the equation is as follows: A/V = (4/d + 2/πd2)/V; for a cylinder with a fixed height: A/V = (2π(V/hπ)1/2h + V/2. V is the volume, d is the cylinder base diameter and h is the cylinder height.
Figure 3.Impacts of vesicle size on some physicochemical parameters.
(A) High protein-to-lipid ratios allow for smaller synthetic cells. The scaling of the flux of molecules imported into vesicles is shown. Flux is given by the equation: J = (Mπd2r)/M; where M is the molecular mass of the lipid, d is the vesicle diameter, r is the protein-to-lipid ratio, k is the turnover number, M is the molecular mass of the protein and A is the area of one lipid molecule in the membrane. Protein-to-lipid mass ratios of 1 : 100 and 1 : 500 are plotted (dashed and continuous lines, respectively) for transporter turnover numbers of 1, 10 and 100 s−1 (cyan, orange and black lines respectively). Lines stop at vesicles’ diameters where, on average, one transporter would be present in a vesicle. We assume a single lipid molecular mass to be 800 g mol−1 (BNID:101838) with area in a membrane of 0.5 nm2 (BNID:106993). Transporter mass was taken as 100 kDa [112]. With our assumptions, J = 1.6 × 10−2 × πd2r. (B) Diffusion of molecules in large vesicles and the scaling of Brownian diffusion time with the diameter of a vesicle. The y-axis is given as a mean time needed for a molecule to diffuse from the center of a sphere to its edge. The diffusion coefficients used are based on mobility measurements in the cytoplasm of E. coli for NBD-glucose (50 µm2 s−1; green line, [25]), GFP (10 µm2 s−1; cyan, [34]), LacZ-GFP homotetramer (0.8 µm2 s−1; orange, [25]) and free 30S ribosomal subunit (0.12 µm2 s−1; black, [107]). Dashed line represents GFP diffusion in dilute solution (87 µm2 s−1 [113]). Diffusion time is given by the equation: t = d2/24D; where d is the vesicle diameter and D is the diffusion coefficient. (C) Small vesicles are prone to stochasticity. The number of molecules per vesicle as a function of vesicle diameter is shown. One nanomolar concentration (black line) corresponds to concentrations of a low-abundance protein (∼1 copy per 1 µm3 cell), 1 µM corresponds to a medium-high abundant protein (∼103 copies per 1 µm3 cell, [114]), 1 mM is representative of the abundance of a metabolite (e.g. amino acid), and 100 mM corresponds to most abundant solutes in cells (K+, glutamate) [20]. The number of molecules is given by the equation: N = 4/3π(d/2)3NAC; where d is the vesicle diameter, N is Avogadro number, C is molar concentration. (D) Number of genes in synthetic cells is limited by vesicle size. The volume fraction of the genetic material as a function of vesicle diameter is shown. The black line represents volume fraction taken by the E. coli chromosome (4.6 Mbp; BNID:100269), orange line corresponds to the chromosome size of P. ubique (1.3 Mbp, [115]), cyan line is associated with the chromosome of JCVI-syn3A [106], and green line represents an approximate size of a 100-gene synthetic chromosome (assuming 1000 bp per gene, [116]). The volume fraction of the genetic material is based on the volume fraction of the P. ubique chromosome [115] in 0.01 µm3 volume [63]. The volume fraction is given by the equation: Φ = (3NbpVbp)/(4π(d/2)3); where d is the vesicle diameter, N is the number of base pairs and V is the volume of a single base pair (here 2.2 nm3).