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Antifreeze protein

Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) or ice structuring proteins refer to a class of polypeptides produced by certain animals, plants, fungi and bacteria that permit their survival in temperatures below the freezing point of water. AFPs bind to small ice crystals to inhibit the growth and recrystallization of ice that would otherwise be fatal.[3] There is also increasing evidence that AFPs interact with mammalian cell membranes to protect them from cold damage. This work suggests the involvement of AFPs in cold acclimatization.[4]

Insect antifreeze protein, Tenebrio-type
Structure of the Tenebrio molitor beta-helical antifreeze protein[1]
Identifiers
SymbolAFP
PfamPF02420
InterProIPR003460
SCOP21ezg / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary
Insect antifreeze protein (CfAFP)
Structure of Choristoneura fumiferana (spruce budworm) beta-helical antifreeze protein[2]
Identifiers
SymbolCfAFP
PfamPF05264
InterProIPR007928
SCOP21m8n / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary
Fish antifreeze protein, type I
Identifiers
Symbol?
InterProIPR000104
SCOP21wfb / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Fish antifreeze protein, type II
Identifiers
Symbol?
InterProIPR002353
CATH2py2
SCOP22afp / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Fish antifreeze protein, type III
Identifiers
Symbol?
InterProIPR006013
SCOP21hg7 / SCOPe / SUPFAM
See also the SAF domain (InterProIPR013974).
Ice-binding protein-like (sea ice organism)
Identifiers
SymbolDUF3494
PfamPF11999
InterProIPR021884
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary

Non-colligative properties edit

Unlike the widely used automotive antifreeze, ethylene glycol, AFPs do not lower freezing point in proportion to concentration.[citation needed] Rather, they work in a noncolligative manner. This phenomenon allows them to act as an antifreeze at concentrations 1/300th to 1/500th of those of other dissolved solutes. Their low concentration minimizes their effect on osmotic pressure.[4] The unusual properties of AFPs are attributed to their selective affinity for specific crystalline ice forms and the resulting blockade of the ice-nucleation process.[5]

Thermal hysteresis edit

AFPs create a difference between the melting point and freezing point (busting temperature of AFP bound ice crystal) known as thermal hysteresis. The addition of AFPs at the interface between solid ice and liquid water inhibits the thermodynamically favored growth of the ice crystal. Ice growth is kinetically inhibited by the AFPs covering the water-accessible surfaces of ice.[5]

Thermal hysteresis is easily measured in the lab with a nanolitre osmometer. Organisms differ in their values of thermal hysteresis. The maximum level of thermal hysteresis shown by fish AFP is approximately −3.5 °C (Sheikh Mahatabuddin et al., SciRep)(29.3 °F). In contrast, aquatic organisms are exposed only to −1 to −2 °C below freezing. During the extreme winter months, the spruce budworm resists freezing at temperatures approaching −30 °C.[4]

The rate of cooling can influence the thermal hysteresis value of AFPs. Rapid cooling can substantially decrease the nonequilibrium freezing point, and hence the thermal hysteresis value. Consequently, organisms cannot necessarily adapt to their subzero environment if the temperature drops abruptly.[4]

Freeze tolerance versus freeze avoidance edit

Species containing AFPs may be classified as

Freeze avoidant: These species are able to prevent their body fluids from freezing altogether. Generally, the AFP function may be overcome at extremely cold temperatures, leading to rapid ice growth and death.

Freeze tolerant: These species are able to survive body fluid freezing. Some freeze tolerant species are thought to use AFPs as cryoprotectants to prevent the damage of freezing, but not freezing altogether. The exact mechanism is still unknown. However, it is thought AFPs may inhibit recrystallization and stabilize cell membranes to prevent damage by ice.[6] They may work in conjunction with ice nucleating proteins (INPs) to control the rate of ice propagation following freezing.[6]

Diversity edit

There are many known nonhomologous types of AFPs.

Fish AFPs edit

 
Figure 1. The three faces of Type I AFP

Antifreeze glycoproteins or AFGPs are found in Antarctic notothenioids and northern cod. They are 2.6-3.3 kD.[7] AFGPs evolved separately in notothenioids and northern cod. In notothenioids, the AFGP gene arose from an ancestral trypsinogen-like serine protease gene.[8]

  • Type I AFP is found in winter flounder, longhorn sculpin and shorthorn sculpin. It is the best documented AFP because it was the first to have its three-dimensional structure determined.[9] Type I AFP consists of a single, long, amphipathic alpha helix, about 3.3-4.5 kD in size. There are three faces to the 3D structure: the hydrophobic, hydrophilic, and Thr-Asx face.[9]
    • Type I-hyp AFP (where hyp stands for hyperactive) are found in several righteye flounders. It is approximately 32 kD (two 17 kD dimeric molecules). The protein was isolated from the blood plasma of winter flounder. It is considerably better at depressing freezing temperature than most fish AFPs.[10] The ability is partially derived from its many repeats of the Type I ice-binding site.[11]
  • Type II AFPs (e.g. P05140) are found in sea raven, smelt and herring. They are cysteine-rich globular proteins containing five disulfide bonds.[12] Type II AFPs likely evolved from calcium dependent (c-type) lectins.[13] Sea ravens, smelt, and herring are quite divergent lineages of teleost. If the AFP gene were present in the most recent common ancestor of these lineages, it is peculiar that the gene is scattered throughout those lineages, present in some orders and absent in others. It has been suggested that lateral gene transfer could be attributed to this discrepancy, such that the smelt acquired the type II AFP gene from the herring.[14]
  • Type III AFPs are found in Antarctic eelpout. They exhibit similar overall hydrophobicity at ice binding surfaces to type I AFPs. They are approximately 6kD in size.[7] Type III AFPs likely evolved from a sialic acid synthase (SAS) gene present in Antarctic eelpout. Through a gene duplication event, this gene—which has been shown to exhibit some ice-binding activity of its own—evolved into an effective AFP gene by loss of the N-terminal part.[15]
  • Type IV AFPs (P80961) are found in longhorn sculpins. They are alpha helical proteins rich in glutamate and glutamine.[16] This protein is approximately 12KDa in size and consists of a 4-helix bundle.[16] Its only posttranslational modification is a pyroglutamate residue, a cyclized glutamine residue at its N-terminus.[16]

Plant AFPs edit

The classification of AFPs became more complicated when antifreeze proteins from plants were discovered.[17] Plant AFPs are rather different from the other AFPs in the following aspects:

  1. They have much weaker thermal hysteresis activity when compared to other AFPs.[18]
  2. Their physiological function is likely in inhibiting the recrystallization of ice rather than in preventing ice formation.[18]
  3. Most of them are evolved pathogenesis-related proteins, sometimes retaining antifungal properties.[18]

Insect AFPs edit

There are a number of AFPs found in insects, including those from Dendroides, Tenebrio and Rhagium beetles, spruce budworm and pale beauty moths, and midges (same order as flies). Insect AFPs share certain similarities, with most having higher activity (i.e. greater thermal hysteresis value, termed hyperactive) and a repetitive structure with a flat ice-binding surface. Those from the closely related Tenebrio and Dendroides beetles are homologous and each 12–13 amino-acid repeat is stabilized by an internal disulfide bond. Isoforms have between 6 and 10 of these repeats that form a coil, or beta-solenoid. One side of the solenoid has a flat ice-binding surface that consists of a double row of threonine residues.[6][19] Other beetles (genus Rhagium) have longer repeats without internal disulfide bonds that form a compressed beta-solenoid (beta sandwich) with four rows of threonine residus,[20] and this AFP is structurally similar to that modelled for the non-homologous AFP from the pale beauty moth.[21] In contrast, the AFP from the spruce budworm moth is a solenoid that superficially resembles the Tenebrio protein, with a similar ice-binding surface, but it has a triangular cross-section, with longer repeats that lack the internal disulfide bonds. The AFP from midges is structurally similar to those from Tenebrio and Dendroides, but the disulfide-braced beta-solenoid is formed from shorter 10 amino-acids repeats, and instead of threonine, the ice-binding surface consists of a single row of tyrosine residues.[22] Springtails (Collembola) are not insects, but like insects, they are arthropods with six legs. A species found in Canada, which is often called a "snow flea", produces hyperactive AFPs.[23] Although they are also repetitive and have a flat ice-binding surface, the similarity ends there. Around 50% of the residues are glycine (Gly), with repeats of Gly-Gly- X or Gly-X-X, where X is any amino acid. Each 3-amino-acid repeat forms one turn of a polyproline type II helix. The helices then fold together, to form a bundle that is two helices thick, with an ice-binding face dominated by small hydrophobic residues like alanine, rather than threonine.[24] Other insects, such as an Alaskan beetle, produce hyperactive antifreezes that are even less similar, as they are polymers of sugars (xylomannan) rather than polymers of amino acids (proteins).[25] Taken together, this suggests that most of the AFPs and antifreezes arose after the lineages that gave rise to these various insects diverged. The similarities they do share are the result of convergent evolution.

Sea ice organism AFPs edit

Many microorganisms living in sea ice possess AFPs that belong to a single family. The diatoms Fragilariopsis cylindrus and F. curta play a key role in polar sea ice communities, dominating the assemblages of both platelet layer and within pack ice. AFPs are widespread in these species, and the presence of AFP genes as a multigene family indicates the importance of this group for the genus Fragilariopsis.[26] AFPs identified in F. cylindrus belong to an AFP family which is represented in different taxa and can be found in other organisms related to sea ice (Colwellia spp., Navicula glaciei, Chaetoceros neogracile and Stephos longipes and Leucosporidium antarcticum)[27][28] and Antarctic inland ice bacteria (Flavobacteriaceae),[29][30] as well as in cold-tolerant fungi (Typhula ishikariensis, Lentinula edodes and Flammulina populicola).[31][32]

Several structures for sea ice AFPs have been solved. This family of proteins fold into a beta helix that form a flat ice-binding surface.[33] Unlike the other AFPs, there is not a singular sequence motif for the ice-binding site.[34]

AFP found from the metagenome of the ciliate Euplotes focardii and psychrophilic bacteria has an efficient ice re-crystallization inhibition ability.[35] 1 μM of Euplotes focardii consortium ice-binding protein (EfcIBP) is enough for the total inhibition of ice re-crystallization in –7.4 °C temperature. This ice-recrystallization inhibition ability helps bacteria to tolerate ice rather than preventing the formation of ice. EfcIBP produces also thermal hysteresis gap, but this ability is not as efficient as the ice-recrystallization inhibition ability. EfcIBP helps to protect both purified proteins and whole bacterial cells in freezing temperatures. Green fluorescent protein is functional after several cycles of freezing and melting when incubated with EfcIBP. Escherichia coli survives longer periods in 0 °C temperature when the efcIBP gene was inserted to E. coli genome.[35] EfcIBP has a typical AFP structure consisting of multiple beta-sheets and an alpha-helix. Also, all the ice-binding polar residues are at the same site of the protein.[35]

Evolution edit

The remarkable diversity and distribution of AFPs suggest the different types evolved recently in response to sea level glaciation occurring 1–2 million years ago in the Northern hemisphere and 10-30 million years ago in Antarctica. Data collected from deep sea ocean drilling has revealed that the development of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current was formed over 30 million years ago.[36] The cooling of Antarctic imposed from this current caused a mass extinction of teleost species that were unable to withstand freezing temperatures.[37] Notothenioids species with the antifreeze gylcoprotein were able to survive the glaciation event and diversify into new niches.[37][8]

This independent development of similar adaptations is referred to as convergent evolution.[4] Evidence for convergent evolution in Northern cod (Gadidae) and Notothenioids is supported by the findings of different spacer sequences and different organization of  introns and exons as well as unmatching AFGP tripeptide sequences, which emerged from duplications of short ancestral sequences which were differently permuted (for the same tripeptide) by each group. These groups diverged approximately 7-15 million years ago. Shortly after (5-15 mya), the AFGP gene evolved from an ancestral pancreatic trypsinogen gene in Notothenioids. AFGP and trypsinogen genes split via a sequence divergence - an adaptation which occurred alongside the cooling and eventual freezing of the Antarctic Ocean. The evolution of the AFGP gene in Northern cod occurred more recently (~3.2 mya) and emerged from a noncoding sequence via tandem duplications in a Thr-Ala-Ala unit. Antarctic notothenioid fish and artic cod, Boreogadus saida, are part of two distinct orders and have very similar antifreeze glycoproteins.[38] Although the two fish orders have similar antifreeze proteins, cod species contain arginine in AFG, while Antarctic notothenioid do not.[38] The role of arginine as an enhancer has been investigated in Dendroides canadensis antifreeze protein (DAFP-1) by observing the effect of a chemical modification using 1-2 cyclohexanedione.[39] Previous research has found various enhancers of this bettles' antifreeze protein including a thaumatin-like protein and polycarboxylates.[40][41] Modifications of DAFP-1 with the arginine specific reagent resulted in the partial and complete loss of thermal hysteresis in DAFP-1, indicating that arginine plays a crucial role in enhancing its ability.[39] Different enhancer molecules of DAFP-1 have distinct thermal hysteresis activity.[41] Amornwittawat et al. 2008 found that the number of carboxylate groups in a molecules influence the enhancing ability of DAFP-1.[41] Optimum activity in TH is correlated with high concentration of enhancer molecules.[41] Li et al. 1998 investigated the effects of pH and solute on thermal hysteresis in Antifreeze proteins from Dendrioides canadensis.[42] TH activity of DAFP-4 was not affected by pH unless the there was a low solute concentration (pH 1) in which TH decreased.[42] The effect of five solutes; succinate, citrate, malate, malonate, and acetate, on TH activity was reported.[42] Among the five solutes, citrate was shown to have the greatest enhancing effect.[42]

This is an example of a proto-ORF model, a rare occurrence where new genes pre exist as a formed open reading frame before the existence of the regulatory element needed to activate them.

In fishes, horizontal gene transfer is responsible for the presence of Type II AFP proteins in some groups without a recently shared phylogeny. In Herring and smelt, up to 98% of introns for this gene are shared; the method of transfer is assumed to occur during mating via sperm cells exposed to foreign DNA.[43] The direction of transfer is known to be from herring to smelt as herring have 8 times the copies of AFP gene as smelt (1) and the segments of the gene in smelt house transposable elements which are otherwise characteristic of and common in herring but not found in other fishes.[43]

There are two reasons why many types of AFPs are able to carry out the same function despite their diversity:

  1. Although ice is uniformly composed of water molecules, it has many different surfaces exposed for binding. Different types of AFPs may interact with different surfaces.
  2. Although the five types of AFPs differ in their primary structure of amino acids, when each folds into a functioning protein they may share similarities in their three-dimensional or tertiary structure that facilitates the same interactions with ice.[4][44]

Antifreeze glycoprotein activity has been observed across several ray-finned species including eelpouts, sculpins, and cod species.[45][46] Fish species that possess the antifreeze glycoprotein express different levels of protein activity.[47] Polar cod (Boreogadus saida) exhibit similar protein activity and properties to the Antarctic species, T. borchgrevinki.[47] Both species have higher protein activity than saffron cod (Eleginus gracilis).[47] Ice antifreeze proteins have been reported in diatom species to help decrease the freezing point of organism's proteins.[26] Bayer-Giraldi et al. 2010 found 30 species from distinct taxa with homologues of ice antifreeze proteins.[26] The diversity is consistent with previous research that has observed the presence of these genes in crustaceans, insects, bacteria, and fungi.[8][48][49] Horizontal gene transfer is responsible for the presence of ice antifreeze proteins in two sea diatom species, F. cylindrus and F. curta.[26]

Mechanisms of action edit

AFPs are thought to inhibit ice growth by an adsorption–inhibition mechanism.[50] They adsorb to nonbasal planes of ice, inhibiting thermodynamically-favored ice growth.[51] The presence of a flat, rigid surface in some AFPs seems to facilitate its interaction with ice via Van der Waals force surface complementarity.[52]

Binding to ice edit

Normally, ice crystals grown in solution only exhibit the basal (0001) and prism faces (1010), and appear as round and flat discs.[5] However, it appears the presence of AFPs exposes other faces. It now appears the ice surface 2021 is the preferred binding surface, at least for AFP type I.[53] Through studies on type I AFP, ice and AFP were initially thought to interact through hydrogen bonding (Raymond and DeVries, 1977). However, when parts of the protein thought to facilitate this hydrogen bonding were mutated, the hypothesized decrease in antifreeze activity was not observed. Recent data suggest hydrophobic interactions could be the main contributor.[54] It is difficult to discern the exact mechanism of binding because of the complex water-ice interface. Currently, attempts to uncover the precise mechanism are being made through use of molecular modelling programs (molecular dynamics or the Monte Carlo method).[3][5]

Binding mechanism and antifreeze function edit

According to the structure and function study on the antifreeze protein from Pseudopleuronectes americanus,[55] the antifreeze mechanism of the type-I AFP molecule was shown to be due to the binding to an ice nucleation structure in a zipper-like fashion through hydrogen bonding of the hydroxyl groups of its four Thr residues to the oxygens along the   direction in ice lattice, subsequently stopping or retarding the growth of ice pyramidal planes so as to depress the freeze point.[55]

The above mechanism can be used to elucidate the structure-function relationship of other antifreeze proteins with the following two common features:

  1. recurrence of a Thr residue (or any other polar amino acid residue whose side-chain can form a hydrogen bond with water) in an 11-amino-acid period along the sequence concerned, and
  2. a high percentage of an Ala residue component therein.[55]

History edit

In the 1950s, Norwegian scientist Scholander set out to explain how Arctic fish can survive in water colder than the freezing point of their blood. His experiments led him to believe there was “antifreeze” in the blood of Arctic fish.[3] Then in the late 1960s, animal biologist Arthur DeVries was able to isolate the antifreeze protein through his investigation of Antarctic fish.[56] These proteins were later called antifreeze glycoproteins (AFGPs) or antifreeze glycopeptides to distinguish them from newly discovered nonglycoprotein biological antifreeze agents (AFPs). DeVries worked with Robert Feeney (1970) to characterize the chemical and physical properties of antifreeze proteins.[57] In 1992, Griffith et al. documented their discovery of AFP in winter rye leaves.[17] Around the same time, Urrutia, Duman and Knight (1992) documented thermal hysteresis protein in angiosperms.[58] The next year, Duman and Olsen noted AFPs had also been discovered in over 23 species of angiosperms, including ones eaten by humans.[59] They reported their presence in fungi and bacteria as well.

Name change edit

Recent attempts have been made to relabel antifreeze proteins as ice structuring proteins to more accurately represent their function and to dispose of any assumed negative relation between AFPs and automotive antifreeze, ethylene glycol. These two things are completely separate entities, and show loose similarity only in their function.[60]

Commercial and medical applications edit

Numerous fields would be able to benefit from the protection of tissue damage by freezing. Businesses are currently investigating the use of these proteins in:[citation needed]

  • Increasing freeze tolerance of crop plants and extending the harvest season in cooler climates
  • Improving farm fish production in cooler climates
  • Lengthening shelf life of frozen foods
  • Improving cryosurgery
  • Enhancing preservation of tissues for transplant or transfusion in medicine[23]
  • Therapy for hypothermia
  • Human Cryopreservation (Cryonics)

Unilever has obtained UK, US, EU, Mexico, China, Philippines, Australia and New Zealand approval to use a genetically modified yeast to produce antifreeze proteins from fish for use in ice cream production.[61][62] They are labeled "ISP" or ice structuring protein on the label, instead of AFP or antifreeze protein.

Recent news edit

One recent, successful business endeavor has been the introduction of AFPs into ice cream and yogurt products. This ingredient, labelled ice-structuring protein, has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The proteins are isolated from fish and replicated, on a larger scale, in genetically modified yeast.[63]

There is concern from organizations opposed to genetically modified organisms (GMOs) who believe that antifreeze proteins may cause inflammation.[64] Intake of AFPs in diet is likely substantial in most northerly and temperate regions already.[7] Given the known historic consumption of AFPs, it is safe to conclude their functional properties do not impart any toxicologic or allergenic effects in humans.[7]

As well, the transgenic process of ice structuring proteins production is widely used in society. Insulin and rennet are produced using this technology. The process does not impact the product; it merely makes production more efficient and prevents the death of fish that would otherwise be killed to extract the protein.

Currently, Unilever incorporates AFPs into some of its American products, including some Popsicle ice pops and a new line of Breyers Light Double Churned ice cream bars. In ice cream, AFPs allow the production of very creamy, dense, reduced fat ice cream with fewer additives.[65] They control ice crystal growth brought on by thawing on the loading dock or kitchen table, which reduces texture quality.[66]

In November 2009, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published the discovery of a molecule in an Alaskan beetle that behaves like AFPs, but is composed of saccharides and fatty acids.[25]

A 2010 study demonstrated the stability of superheated water ice crystals in an AFP solution, showing that while the proteins can inhibit freezing, they can also inhibit melting.[67] In 2021, EPFL and Warwick scientists have found an artificial imitation of antifreeze proteins.[68]

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Haymet AD, Ward LG, Harding MM (1999). "Winter Flounder 'anti-freeze' proteins: Synthesis and ice growth inhibition of analogues that probe the relative importance of hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 121 (5): 941–948. doi:10.1021/ja9801341. ISSN 0002-7863.
  • Sicheri F, Yang DS (June 1995). "Ice-binding structure and mechanism of an antifreeze protein from winter flounder". Nature. 375 (6530): 427–31. Bibcode:1995Natur.375..427S. doi:10.1038/375427a0. hdl:11375/7005. PMID 7760940. S2CID 758990.

External links edit

  • Antifreeze Proteins: Molecule of the Month 2015-11-04 at the Wayback Machine, by David Goodsell, RCSB Protein Data Bank
  • Overview of all the structural information available in the PDB for UniProt: Q9GTP0 (Thermal hysteresis or Antifreeze protein) at the PDBe-KB.

antifreeze, protein, afps, structuring, proteins, refer, class, polypeptides, produced, certain, animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, that, permit, their, survival, temperatures, below, freezing, point, water, afps, bind, small, crystals, inhibit, growth, recryst. Antifreeze proteins AFPs or ice structuring proteins refer to a class of polypeptides produced by certain animals plants fungi and bacteria that permit their survival in temperatures below the freezing point of water AFPs bind to small ice crystals to inhibit the growth and recrystallization of ice that would otherwise be fatal 3 There is also increasing evidence that AFPs interact with mammalian cell membranes to protect them from cold damage This work suggests the involvement of AFPs in cold acclimatization 4 Insect antifreeze protein Tenebrio typeStructure of the Tenebrio molitor beta helical antifreeze protein 1 IdentifiersSymbolAFPPfamPF02420InterProIPR003460SCOP21ezg SCOPe SUPFAMAvailable protein structures Pfam structures ECOD PDBRCSB PDB PDBe PDBjPDBsumstructure summaryInsect antifreeze protein CfAFP Structure of Choristoneura fumiferana spruce budworm beta helical antifreeze protein 2 IdentifiersSymbolCfAFPPfamPF05264InterProIPR007928SCOP21m8n SCOPe SUPFAMAvailable protein structures Pfam structures ECOD PDBRCSB PDB PDBe PDBjPDBsumstructure summaryFish antifreeze protein type IIdentifiersSymbol InterProIPR000104SCOP21wfb SCOPe SUPFAMFish antifreeze protein type IIIdentifiersSymbol InterProIPR002353CATH2py2SCOP22afp SCOPe SUPFAMFish antifreeze protein type IIIIdentifiersSymbol InterProIPR006013SCOP21hg7 SCOPe SUPFAMSee also the SAF domain InterPro IPR013974 Ice binding protein like sea ice organism IdentifiersSymbolDUF3494PfamPF11999InterProIPR021884Available protein structures Pfam structures ECOD PDBRCSB PDB PDBe PDBjPDBsumstructure summary Contents 1 Non colligative properties 2 Thermal hysteresis 3 Freeze tolerance versus freeze avoidance 4 Diversity 4 1 Fish AFPs 4 2 Plant AFPs 4 3 Insect AFPs 4 4 Sea ice organism AFPs 5 Evolution 6 Mechanisms of action 7 Binding to ice 8 Binding mechanism and antifreeze function 9 History 10 Name change 11 Commercial and medical applications 12 Recent news 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksNon colligative properties editUnlike the widely used automotive antifreeze ethylene glycol AFPs do not lower freezing point in proportion to concentration citation needed Rather they work in a noncolligative manner This phenomenon allows them to act as an antifreeze at concentrations 1 300th to 1 500th of those of other dissolved solutes Their low concentration minimizes their effect on osmotic pressure 4 The unusual properties of AFPs are attributed to their selective affinity for specific crystalline ice forms and the resulting blockade of the ice nucleation process 5 Thermal hysteresis editAFPs create a difference between the melting point and freezing point busting temperature of AFP bound ice crystal known as thermal hysteresis The addition of AFPs at the interface between solid ice and liquid water inhibits the thermodynamically favored growth of the ice crystal Ice growth is kinetically inhibited by the AFPs covering the water accessible surfaces of ice 5 Thermal hysteresis is easily measured in the lab with a nanolitre osmometer Organisms differ in their values of thermal hysteresis The maximum level of thermal hysteresis shown by fish AFP is approximately 3 5 C Sheikh Mahatabuddin et al SciRep 29 3 F In contrast aquatic organisms are exposed only to 1 to 2 C below freezing During the extreme winter months the spruce budworm resists freezing at temperatures approaching 30 C 4 The rate of cooling can influence the thermal hysteresis value of AFPs Rapid cooling can substantially decrease the nonequilibrium freezing point and hence the thermal hysteresis value Consequently organisms cannot necessarily adapt to their subzero environment if the temperature drops abruptly 4 Freeze tolerance versus freeze avoidance editSpecies containing AFPs may be classified asFreeze avoidant These species are able to prevent their body fluids from freezing altogether Generally the AFP function may be overcome at extremely cold temperatures leading to rapid ice growth and death Freeze tolerant These species are able to survive body fluid freezing Some freeze tolerant species are thought to use AFPs as cryoprotectants to prevent the damage of freezing but not freezing altogether The exact mechanism is still unknown However it is thought AFPs may inhibit recrystallization and stabilize cell membranes to prevent damage by ice 6 They may work in conjunction with ice nucleating proteins INPs to control the rate of ice propagation following freezing 6 Diversity editThere are many known nonhomologous types of AFPs Fish AFPs edit nbsp Figure 1 The three faces of Type I AFPAntifreeze glycoproteins or AFGPs are found in Antarctic notothenioids and northern cod They are 2 6 3 3 kD 7 AFGPs evolved separately in notothenioids and northern cod In notothenioids the AFGP gene arose from an ancestral trypsinogen like serine protease gene 8 Type I AFP is found in winter flounder longhorn sculpin and shorthorn sculpin It is the best documented AFP because it was the first to have its three dimensional structure determined 9 Type I AFP consists of a single long amphipathic alpha helix about 3 3 4 5 kD in size There are three faces to the 3D structure the hydrophobic hydrophilic and Thr Asx face 9 Type I hyp AFP where hyp stands for hyperactive are found in several righteye flounders It is approximately 32 kD two 17 kD dimeric molecules The protein was isolated from the blood plasma of winter flounder It is considerably better at depressing freezing temperature than most fish AFPs 10 The ability is partially derived from its many repeats of the Type I ice binding site 11 Type II AFPs e g P05140 are found in sea raven smelt and herring They are cysteine rich globular proteins containing five disulfide bonds 12 Type II AFPs likely evolved from calcium dependent c type lectins 13 Sea ravens smelt and herring are quite divergent lineages of teleost If the AFP gene were present in the most recent common ancestor of these lineages it is peculiar that the gene is scattered throughout those lineages present in some orders and absent in others It has been suggested that lateral gene transfer could be attributed to this discrepancy such that the smelt acquired the type II AFP gene from the herring 14 Type III AFPs are found in Antarctic eelpout They exhibit similar overall hydrophobicity at ice binding surfaces to type I AFPs They are approximately 6kD in size 7 Type III AFPs likely evolved from a sialic acid synthase SAS gene present in Antarctic eelpout Through a gene duplication event this gene which has been shown to exhibit some ice binding activity of its own evolved into an effective AFP gene by loss of the N terminal part 15 Type IV AFPs P80961 are found in longhorn sculpins They are alpha helical proteins rich in glutamate and glutamine 16 This protein is approximately 12KDa in size and consists of a 4 helix bundle 16 Its only posttranslational modification is a pyroglutamate residue a cyclized glutamine residue at its N terminus 16 Plant AFPs edit Main article dehydrin The classification of AFPs became more complicated when antifreeze proteins from plants were discovered 17 Plant AFPs are rather different from the other AFPs in the following aspects They have much weaker thermal hysteresis activity when compared to other AFPs 18 Their physiological function is likely in inhibiting the recrystallization of ice rather than in preventing ice formation 18 Most of them are evolved pathogenesis related proteins sometimes retaining antifungal properties 18 Insect AFPs edit There are a number of AFPs found in insects including those from Dendroides Tenebrio and Rhagium beetles spruce budworm and pale beauty moths and midges same order as flies Insect AFPs share certain similarities with most having higher activity i e greater thermal hysteresis value termed hyperactive and a repetitive structure with a flat ice binding surface Those from the closely related Tenebrio and Dendroides beetles are homologous and each 12 13 amino acid repeat is stabilized by an internal disulfide bond Isoforms have between 6 and 10 of these repeats that form a coil or beta solenoid One side of the solenoid has a flat ice binding surface that consists of a double row of threonine residues 6 19 Other beetles genus Rhagium have longer repeats without internal disulfide bonds that form a compressed beta solenoid beta sandwich with four rows of threonine residus 20 and this AFP is structurally similar to that modelled for the non homologous AFP from the pale beauty moth 21 In contrast the AFP from the spruce budworm moth is a solenoid that superficially resembles the Tenebrio protein with a similar ice binding surface but it has a triangular cross section with longer repeats that lack the internal disulfide bonds The AFP from midges is structurally similar to those from Tenebrio and Dendroides but the disulfide braced beta solenoid is formed from shorter 10 amino acids repeats and instead of threonine the ice binding surface consists of a single row of tyrosine residues 22 Springtails Collembola are not insects but like insects they are arthropods with six legs A species found in Canada which is often called a snow flea produces hyperactive AFPs 23 Although they are also repetitive and have a flat ice binding surface the similarity ends there Around 50 of the residues are glycine Gly with repeats of Gly Gly X or Gly X X where X is any amino acid Each 3 amino acid repeat forms one turn of a polyproline type II helix The helices then fold together to form a bundle that is two helices thick with an ice binding face dominated by small hydrophobic residues like alanine rather than threonine 24 Other insects such as an Alaskan beetle produce hyperactive antifreezes that are even less similar as they are polymers of sugars xylomannan rather than polymers of amino acids proteins 25 Taken together this suggests that most of the AFPs and antifreezes arose after the lineages that gave rise to these various insects diverged The similarities they do share are the result of convergent evolution Sea ice organism AFPs edit Many microorganisms living in sea ice possess AFPs that belong to a single family The diatoms Fragilariopsis cylindrus and F curta play a key role in polar sea ice communities dominating the assemblages of both platelet layer and within pack ice AFPs are widespread in these species and the presence of AFP genes as a multigene family indicates the importance of this group for the genus Fragilariopsis 26 AFPs identified in F cylindrus belong to an AFP family which is represented in different taxa and can be found in other organisms related to sea ice Colwellia spp Navicula glaciei Chaetoceros neogracile and Stephos longipes and Leucosporidium antarcticum 27 28 and Antarctic inland ice bacteria Flavobacteriaceae 29 30 as well as in cold tolerant fungi Typhula ishikariensis Lentinula edodes and Flammulina populicola 31 32 Several structures for sea ice AFPs have been solved This family of proteins fold into a beta helix that form a flat ice binding surface 33 Unlike the other AFPs there is not a singular sequence motif for the ice binding site 34 AFP found from the metagenome of the ciliate Euplotes focardii and psychrophilic bacteria has an efficient ice re crystallization inhibition ability 35 1 mM of Euplotes focardii consortium ice binding protein EfcIBP is enough for the total inhibition of ice re crystallization in 7 4 C temperature This ice recrystallization inhibition ability helps bacteria to tolerate ice rather than preventing the formation of ice EfcIBP produces also thermal hysteresis gap but this ability is not as efficient as the ice recrystallization inhibition ability EfcIBP helps to protect both purified proteins and whole bacterial cells in freezing temperatures Green fluorescent protein is functional after several cycles of freezing and melting when incubated with EfcIBP Escherichia coli survives longer periods in 0 C temperature when the efcIBP gene was inserted to E coli genome 35 EfcIBP has a typical AFP structure consisting of multiple beta sheets and an alpha helix Also all the ice binding polar residues are at the same site of the protein 35 Evolution editThe remarkable diversity and distribution of AFPs suggest the different types evolved recently in response to sea level glaciation occurring 1 2 million years ago in the Northern hemisphere and 10 30 million years ago in Antarctica Data collected from deep sea ocean drilling has revealed that the development of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current was formed over 30 million years ago 36 The cooling of Antarctic imposed from this current caused a mass extinction of teleost species that were unable to withstand freezing temperatures 37 Notothenioids species with the antifreeze gylcoprotein were able to survive the glaciation event and diversify into new niches 37 8 This independent development of similar adaptations is referred to as convergent evolution 4 Evidence for convergent evolution in Northern cod Gadidae and Notothenioids is supported by the findings of different spacer sequences and different organization of introns and exons as well as unmatching AFGP tripeptide sequences which emerged from duplications of short ancestral sequences which were differently permuted for the same tripeptide by each group These groups diverged approximately 7 15 million years ago Shortly after 5 15 mya the AFGP gene evolved from an ancestral pancreatic trypsinogen gene in Notothenioids AFGP and trypsinogen genes split via a sequence divergence an adaptation which occurred alongside the cooling and eventual freezing of the Antarctic Ocean The evolution of the AFGP gene in Northern cod occurred more recently 3 2 mya and emerged from a noncoding sequence via tandem duplications in a Thr Ala Ala unit Antarctic notothenioid fish and artic cod Boreogadus saida are part of two distinct orders and have very similar antifreeze glycoproteins 38 Although the two fish orders have similar antifreeze proteins cod species contain arginine in AFG while Antarctic notothenioid do not 38 The role of arginine as an enhancer has been investigated in Dendroides canadensis antifreeze protein DAFP 1 by observing the effect of a chemical modification using 1 2 cyclohexanedione 39 Previous research has found various enhancers of this bettles antifreeze protein including a thaumatin like protein and polycarboxylates 40 41 Modifications of DAFP 1 with the arginine specific reagent resulted in the partial and complete loss of thermal hysteresis in DAFP 1 indicating that arginine plays a crucial role in enhancing its ability 39 Different enhancer molecules of DAFP 1 have distinct thermal hysteresis activity 41 Amornwittawat et al 2008 found that the number of carboxylate groups in a molecules influence the enhancing ability of DAFP 1 41 Optimum activity in TH is correlated with high concentration of enhancer molecules 41 Li et al 1998 investigated the effects of pH and solute on thermal hysteresis in Antifreeze proteins from Dendrioides canadensis 42 TH activity of DAFP 4 was not affected by pH unless the there was a low solute concentration pH 1 in which TH decreased 42 The effect of five solutes succinate citrate malate malonate and acetate on TH activity was reported 42 Among the five solutes citrate was shown to have the greatest enhancing effect 42 This is an example of a proto ORF model a rare occurrence where new genes pre exist as a formed open reading frame before the existence of the regulatory element needed to activate them In fishes horizontal gene transfer is responsible for the presence of Type II AFP proteins in some groups without a recently shared phylogeny In Herring and smelt up to 98 of introns for this gene are shared the method of transfer is assumed to occur during mating via sperm cells exposed to foreign DNA 43 The direction of transfer is known to be from herring to smelt as herring have 8 times the copies of AFP gene as smelt 1 and the segments of the gene in smelt house transposable elements which are otherwise characteristic of and common in herring but not found in other fishes 43 There are two reasons why many types of AFPs are able to carry out the same function despite their diversity Although ice is uniformly composed of water molecules it has many different surfaces exposed for binding Different types of AFPs may interact with different surfaces Although the five types of AFPs differ in their primary structure of amino acids when each folds into a functioning protein they may share similarities in their three dimensional or tertiary structure that facilitates the same interactions with ice 4 44 Antifreeze glycoprotein activity has been observed across several ray finned species including eelpouts sculpins and cod species 45 46 Fish species that possess the antifreeze glycoprotein express different levels of protein activity 47 Polar cod Boreogadus saida exhibit similar protein activity and properties to the Antarctic species T borchgrevinki 47 Both species have higher protein activity than saffron cod Eleginus gracilis 47 Ice antifreeze proteins have been reported in diatom species to help decrease the freezing point of organism s proteins 26 Bayer Giraldi et al 2010 found 30 species from distinct taxa with homologues of ice antifreeze proteins 26 The diversity is consistent with previous research that has observed the presence of these genes in crustaceans insects bacteria and fungi 8 48 49 Horizontal gene transfer is responsible for the presence of ice antifreeze proteins in two sea diatom species F cylindrus and F curta 26 Mechanisms of action editAFPs are thought to inhibit ice growth by an adsorption inhibition mechanism 50 They adsorb to nonbasal planes of ice inhibiting thermodynamically favored ice growth 51 The presence of a flat rigid surface in some AFPs seems to facilitate its interaction with ice via Van der Waals force surface complementarity 52 Binding to ice editNormally ice crystals grown in solution only exhibit the basal 0001 and prism faces 1010 and appear as round and flat discs 5 However it appears the presence of AFPs exposes other faces It now appears the ice surface 2021 is the preferred binding surface at least for AFP type I 53 Through studies on type I AFP ice and AFP were initially thought to interact through hydrogen bonding Raymond and DeVries 1977 However when parts of the protein thought to facilitate this hydrogen bonding were mutated the hypothesized decrease in antifreeze activity was not observed Recent data suggest hydrophobic interactions could be the main contributor 54 It is difficult to discern the exact mechanism of binding because of the complex water ice interface Currently attempts to uncover the precise mechanism are being made through use of molecular modelling programs molecular dynamics or the Monte Carlo method 3 5 Binding mechanism and antifreeze function editAccording to the structure and function study on the antifreeze protein from Pseudopleuronectes americanus 55 the antifreeze mechanism of the type I AFP molecule was shown to be due to the binding to an ice nucleation structure in a zipper like fashion through hydrogen bonding of the hydroxyl groups of its four Thr residues to the oxygens along the 01 1 2 displaystyle 01 overline 1 2 nbsp direction in ice lattice subsequently stopping or retarding the growth of ice pyramidal planes so as to depress the freeze point 55 The above mechanism can be used to elucidate the structure function relationship of other antifreeze proteins with the following two common features recurrence of a Thr residue or any other polar amino acid residue whose side chain can form a hydrogen bond with water in an 11 amino acid period along the sequence concerned and a high percentage of an Ala residue component therein 55 History editIn the 1950s Norwegian scientist Scholander set out to explain how Arctic fish can survive in water colder than the freezing point of their blood His experiments led him to believe there was antifreeze in the blood of Arctic fish 3 Then in the late 1960s animal biologist Arthur DeVries was able to isolate the antifreeze protein through his investigation of Antarctic fish 56 These proteins were later called antifreeze glycoproteins AFGPs or antifreeze glycopeptides to distinguish them from newly discovered nonglycoprotein biological antifreeze agents AFPs DeVries worked with Robert Feeney 1970 to characterize the chemical and physical properties of antifreeze proteins 57 In 1992 Griffith et al documented their discovery of AFP in winter rye leaves 17 Around the same time Urrutia Duman and Knight 1992 documented thermal hysteresis protein in angiosperms 58 The next year Duman and Olsen noted AFPs had also been discovered in over 23 species of angiosperms including ones eaten by humans 59 They reported their presence in fungi and bacteria as well Name change editRecent attempts have been made to relabel antifreeze proteins as ice structuring proteins to more accurately represent their function and to dispose of any assumed negative relation between AFPs and automotive antifreeze ethylene glycol These two things are completely separate entities and show loose similarity only in their function 60 Commercial and medical applications editNumerous fields would be able to benefit from the protection of tissue damage by freezing Businesses are currently investigating the use of these proteins in citation needed Increasing freeze tolerance of crop plants and extending the harvest season in cooler climates Improving farm fish production in cooler climates Lengthening shelf life of frozen foods Improving cryosurgery Enhancing preservation of tissues for transplant or transfusion in medicine 23 Therapy for hypothermia Human Cryopreservation Cryonics Unilever has obtained UK US EU Mexico China Philippines Australia and New Zealand approval to use a genetically modified yeast to produce antifreeze proteins from fish for use in ice cream production 61 62 They are labeled ISP or ice structuring protein on the label instead of AFP or antifreeze protein Recent news editOne recent successful business endeavor has been the introduction of AFPs into ice cream and yogurt products This ingredient labelled ice structuring protein has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration The proteins are isolated from fish and replicated on a larger scale in genetically modified yeast 63 There is concern from organizations opposed to genetically modified organisms GMOs who believe that antifreeze proteins may cause inflammation 64 Intake of AFPs in diet is likely substantial in most northerly and temperate regions already 7 Given the known historic consumption of AFPs it is safe to conclude their functional properties do not impart any toxicologic or allergenic effects in humans 7 As well the transgenic process of ice structuring proteins production is widely used in society Insulin and rennet are produced using this technology The process does not impact the product it merely makes production more efficient and prevents the death of fish that would otherwise be killed to extract the protein Currently Unilever incorporates AFPs into some of its American products including some Popsicle ice pops and a new line of Breyers Light Double Churned ice cream bars In ice cream AFPs allow the production of very creamy dense reduced fat ice cream with fewer additives 65 They control ice crystal growth brought on by thawing on the loading dock or kitchen table which reduces texture quality 66 In November 2009 the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published the discovery of a molecule in an Alaskan beetle that behaves like AFPs but is composed of saccharides and fatty acids 25 A 2010 study demonstrated the stability of superheated water ice crystals in an AFP solution showing that while the proteins can inhibit freezing they can also inhibit melting 67 In 2021 EPFL and Warwick scientists have found an artificial imitation of antifreeze proteins 68 References edit Daley ME Spyracopoulos L Jia Z Davies PL Sykes BD April 2002 Structure and dynamics of a beta helical antifreeze protein Biochemistry 41 17 5515 25 doi 10 1021 bi0121252 PMID 11969412 Leinala EK Davies PL Doucet D Tyshenko MG Walker VK Jia Z September 2002 A beta helical antifreeze protein isoform with increased activity Structural and functional insights The Journal of Biological Chemistry 277 36 33349 52 doi 10 1074 jbc M205575200 PMID 12105229 a b c Goodsell D December 2009 Molecule of the Month Antifreeze Proteins The Scripps Research Institute and the RCSB PDB doi 10 2210 rcsb pdb mom 2009 12 Archived from the original on 2015 11 04 Retrieved 2012 12 30 a b c d e f Fletcher GL Hew CL Davies PL 2001 Antifreeze proteins of teleost fishes Annual Review of Physiology 63 359 90 doi 10 1146 annurev physiol 63 1 359 PMID 11181960 a b c d Jorov A Zhorov BS Yang DS June 2004 Theoretical study of interaction of winter flounder antifreeze protein with ice Protein Science 13 6 1524 37 doi 10 1110 ps 04641104 PMC 2279984 PMID 15152087 a b c Duman JG 2001 Antifreeze and ice nucleator proteins in terrestrial arthropods Annual Review of Physiology 63 327 57 doi 10 1146 annurev physiol 63 1 327 PMID 11181959 a b c d Crevel RW Fedyk JK Spurgeon MJ July 2002 Antifreeze proteins characteristics occurrence and human exposure Food and Chemical Toxicology 40 7 899 903 doi 10 1016 S0278 6915 02 00042 X PMID 12065210 a b c Chen L DeVries AL Cheng CH April 1997 Evolution of antifreeze glycoprotein gene from a trypsinogen gene in Antarctic notothenioid fish Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 94 8 3811 6 Bibcode 1997PNAS 94 3811C doi 10 1073 pnas 94 8 3811 PMC 20523 PMID 9108060 a b Duman JG de Vries AL 1976 Isolation characterization and physical properties of protein antifreezes from the winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus 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3822 Bibcode 1997PNAS 94 3817C doi 10 1073 pnas 94 8 3817 PMC 20524 PMID 9108061 a b Wang Sen Amornwittawat Natapol Juwita Vonny Kao Yu Duman John G Pascal Tod A Goddard William A Wen Xin 2009 10 13 Arginine a Key Residue for the Enhancing Ability of an Antifreeze Protein of the Beetle Dendroides canadensis Biochemistry 48 40 9696 9703 doi 10 1021 bi901283p ISSN 0006 2960 PMC 2760095 PMID 19746966 Wang Lei Duman John G 2006 01 31 A thaumatin like protein from larvae of the beetle Dendroides canadensis enhances the activity of antifreeze proteins Biochemistry 45 4 1278 1284 doi 10 1021 bi051680r ISSN 0006 2960 PMID 16430224 a b c d Amornwittawat Natapol Wang Sen Duman John G Wen Xin December 2008 Polycarboxylates Enhance Beetle Antifreeze Protein Activity Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA Proteins and Proteomics 1784 12 1942 1948 doi 10 1016 j bbapap 2008 06 003 ISSN 0006 3002 PMC 2632549 PMID 18620083 a b c d Li N Andorfer C A Duman J G August 1998 Enhancement of insect antifreeze protein activity by solutes of low molecular mass The Journal of Experimental Biology 201 Pt 15 2243 2251 doi 10 1242 jeb 201 15 2243 ISSN 0022 0949 PMID 9662495 a b Graham LA Davies PL June 2021 Horizontal Gene Transfer in Vertebrates A Fishy Tale Trends in Genetics 37 6 501 503 doi 10 1016 j tig 2021 02 006 ISSN 0168 9525 PMID 33714557 S2CID 232232148 Chen L DeVries AL Cheng CH April 1997 Convergent evolution of antifreeze glycoproteins in Antarctic notothenioid fish and Arctic cod Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 94 8 3817 22 Bibcode 1997PNAS 94 3817C doi 10 1073 pnas 94 8 3817 PMC 20524 PMID 9108061 Raymond JA Lin Y DeVries AL July 1975 Glycoprotein and protein antifreezes in two Alaskan fishes The Journal of Experimental Zoology 193 1 125 130 doi 10 1002 jez 1401930112 PMID 1141843 Hargens AR April 1972 Freezing resistance in polar fishes Science 176 4031 184 186 Bibcode 1972Sci 176 184H doi 10 1126 science 176 4031 184 PMID 17843537 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92 90355 h PMID 1599942 Duman JG Olsen TM 1993 Thermal hysteresis protein activity in bacteria fungi and phylogenetically diverse plants Cryobiology 30 3 322 328 doi 10 1006 cryo 1993 1031 Clarke CJ Buckley SL Lindner N 2002 Ice structuring proteins a new name for antifreeze proteins Cryo Letters 23 2 89 92 PMID 12050776 Bressanini D Gelato OGM Ma quando mai Anche il formaggio allora Scienza in cucina L Espresso Retrieved 6 July 2022 Merrett N 31 July 2007 Unilever protein gets UK go ahead DairyReporter Thorington R 18 September 2014 Can ice cream be tasty and healthy Impact Magazine University of Nottingham Dortch E 2006 Fishy GM yeast used to make ice cream Network of Concerned Farmers Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 9 October 2006 Moskin J 26 July 2006 Creamy Healthier Ice Cream What s the Catch The New York Times Regand A Goff HD January 2006 Ice recrystallization inhibition in ice cream as affected by ice structuring proteins from winter wheat grass Journal of Dairy Science 89 1 49 57 doi 10 3168 jds S0022 0302 06 72068 9 PMID 16357267 Celik Y Graham LA Mok YF Bar M Davies PL Braslavsky I 2010 Superheating of Ice in the Presence of Ice Binding Proteins Biophysical Journal 98 3 245a Bibcode 2010BpJ 98 245C doi 10 1016 j bpj 2009 12 1331 Lay summary in Antifreeze proteins can stop ice melt new study finds Physorg com March 1 2010 Marc C 24 June 2021 Des virus pour imiter les proteines antigel Further reading editHaymet AD Ward LG Harding MM 1999 Winter Flounder anti freeze proteins Synthesis and ice growth inhibition of analogues that probe the relative importance of hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions Journal of the American Chemical Society 121 5 941 948 doi 10 1021 ja9801341 ISSN 0002 7863 Sicheri F Yang DS June 1995 Ice binding structure and mechanism of an antifreeze protein from winter flounder Nature 375 6530 427 31 Bibcode 1995Natur 375 427S doi 10 1038 375427a0 hdl 11375 7005 PMID 7760940 S2CID 758990 External links editCold Hard Fact Fish Antifreeze Produced in Pancreas Antifreeze Proteins Molecule of the Month Archived 2015 11 04 at the Wayback Machine by David Goodsell RCSB Protein Data Bank Overview of all the structural information available in the PDB for UniProt Q9GTP0 Thermal hysteresis or Antifreeze protein at the PDBe KB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antifreeze protein amp oldid 1192373409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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