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Neutron scattering explains how myoglobin can perform without water
Neat,
another evidence of the unique power of neutron scattering in helping
research in diverse areas of science, this time in biology: Neutron
scattering explains how myoglobin can perform without water: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-neutron-myoglobin.html
"Proteins do not need to be surrounded by water to carry out their
vital biological functions, according to scientists from the Institut de
Biologie Structurale (IBS) in Grenoble, the University of Bristol, the
Australian National University, the Institut Laue Langevin and the
Jülich Centre for Neutron Science.
In a new paper, published in the
Journal of the American Chemical Society, the team used a
state-of-the-art neutron scattering technique to demonstrate that when
myoglobin, an oxygen-binding protein found in the muscle tissue of
vertebrates, is enclosed in a sheath of surfactant molecules, it moves
in the same way as when it is surrounded by water. These motions are
essential if a protein is to perform its biological function, and their
findings make proteins a viable material for use in new wound dressings
or even as chemical gas sensors. Water is the natural environment for
soluble proteins and an integral part of their structures which allows
them to carry out their specific function. It had been perceived for
many years that proteins required water or another solvent in order to
function. But in 2010, the Bristol team proved that by grafting polymer
chains onto the protein surface, it was possible to produce solvent- and
water-free myoglobin liquids that could still perform their biological
roles. Scientists have now demonstrated that protein dynamics is the
reason why."
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