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Cytosol

The cytosol, also known as cytoplasmic matrix or groundplasm,[2] is one of the liquids found inside cells (intracellular fluid (ICF)).[3] It is separated into compartments by membranes. For example, the mitochondrial matrix separates the mitochondrion into many compartments.

The cytosol is a crowded solution of many different types of molecules that occupy up to 30% of the cytoplasmic volume.[1]

In the eukaryotic cell, the cytosol is surrounded by the cell membrane and is part of the cytoplasm, which also comprises the mitochondria, plastids, and other organelles (but not their internal fluids and structures); the cell nucleus is separate. The cytosol is thus a liquid matrix around the organelles. In prokaryotes, most of the chemical reactions of metabolism take place in the cytosol, while a few take place in membranes or in the periplasmic space. In eukaryotes, while many metabolic pathways still occur in the cytosol, others take place within organelles.

The cytosol is a complex mixture of substances dissolved in water. Although water forms the large majority of the cytosol, its structure and properties within cells is not well understood. The concentrations of ions such as sodium and potassium in the cytosol are different to those in the extracellular fluid; these differences in ion levels are important in processes such as osmoregulation, cell signaling, and the generation of action potentials in excitable cells such as endocrine, nerve and muscle cells. The cytosol also contains large amounts of macromolecules, which can alter how molecules behave, through macromolecular crowding.

Although it was once thought to be a simple solution of molecules, the cytosol has multiple levels of organization. These include concentration gradients of small molecules such as calcium, large complexes of enzymes that act together and take part in metabolic pathways, and protein complexes such as proteasomes and carboxysomes that enclose and separate parts of the cytosol.

Definition

The term "cytosol" was first introduced in 1965 by H. A. Lardy, and initially referred to the liquid that was produced by breaking cells apart and pelleting all the insoluble components by ultracentrifugation.[4][5] Such a soluble cell extract is not identical to the soluble part of the cell cytoplasm and is usually called a cytoplasmic fraction.[6]

The term cytosol is now used to refer to the liquid phase of the cytoplasm in an intact cell.[6] This excludes any part of the cytoplasm that is contained within organelles.[7] Due to the possibility of confusion between the use of the word "cytosol" to refer to both extracts of cells and the soluble part of the cytoplasm in intact cells, the phrase "aqueous cytoplasm" has been used to describe the liquid contents of the cytoplasm of living cells.[5]

Prior to this, other terms, including hyaloplasm,[8] were used for the cell fluid, not always synonymously, as its nature was not very clear (see protoplasm).[6]

Properties and composition

 
Intracellular fluid content in humans

The proportion of cell volume that is cytosol varies: for example while this compartment forms the bulk of cell structure in bacteria,[9] in plant cells the main compartment is the large central vacuole.[10] The cytosol consists mostly of water, dissolved ions, small molecules, and large water-soluble molecules (such as proteins). The majority of these non-protein molecules have a molecular mass of less than 300 Da.[11] This mixture of small molecules is extraordinarily complex, as the variety of molecules that are involved in metabolism (the metabolites) is immense. For example, up to 200,000 different small molecules might be made in plants, although not all these will be present in the same species, or in a single cell.[12] Estimates of the number of metabolites in single cells such as E. coli and baker's yeast predict that under 1,000 are made.[13][14]

Water

Most of the cytosol is water, which makes up about 70% of the total volume of a typical cell.[15] The pH of the intracellular fluid is 7.4.[16] while human cytosolic pH ranges between 7.0–7.4, and is usually higher if a cell is growing.[17] The viscosity of cytoplasm is roughly the same as pure water, although diffusion of small molecules through this liquid is about fourfold slower than in pure water, due mostly to collisions with the large numbers of macromolecules in the cytosol.[18] Studies in the brine shrimp have examined how water affects cell functions; these saw that a 20% reduction in the amount of water in a cell inhibits metabolism, with metabolism decreasing progressively as the cell dries out and all metabolic activity halting when the water level reaches 70% below normal.[5]

Although water is vital for life, the structure of this water in the cytosol is not well understood, mostly because methods such as nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy only give information on the average structure of water, and cannot measure local variations at the microscopic scale. Even the structure of pure water is poorly understood, due to the ability of water to form structures such as water clusters through hydrogen bonds.[19]

The classic view of water in cells is that about 5% of this water is strongly bound in by solutes or macromolecules as water of solvation, while the majority has the same structure as pure water.[5] This water of solvation is not active in osmosis and may have different solvent properties, so that some dissolved molecules are excluded, while others become concentrated.[20][21] However, others argue that the effects of the high concentrations of macromolecules in cells extend throughout the cytosol and that water in cells behaves very differently from the water in dilute solutions.[22] These ideas include the proposal that cells contain zones of low and high-density water, which could have widespread effects on the structures and functions of the other parts of the cell.[19][23] However, the use of advanced nuclear magnetic resonance methods to directly measure the mobility of water in living cells contradicts this idea, as it suggests that 85% of cell water acts like that pure water, while the remainder is less mobile and probably bound to macromolecules.[24]

Ions

The concentrations of the other ions in cytosol are quite different from those in extracellular fluid and the cytosol also contains much higher amounts of charged macromolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids than the outside of the cell structure.

Typical ion concentrations in mammalian cytosol and plasma.[7]
Ion Concentration (millimolar)
In cytosol In plasma
Potassium 139–150[25][26] 4
Sodium 12 145
Chloride 4 116
Bicarbonate 12 29
Amino acids in proteins 138 9
Magnesium 0.8 1.5
Calcium <0.0002 1.8

In contrast to extracellular fluid, cytosol has a high concentration of potassium ions and a low concentration of sodium ions.[27] This difference in ion concentrations is critical for osmoregulation, since if the ion levels were the same inside a cell as outside, water would enter constantly by osmosis - since the levels of macromolecules inside cells are higher than their levels outside. Instead, sodium ions are expelled and potassium ions taken up by the Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase, potassium ions then flow down their concentration gradient through potassium-selection ion channels, this loss of positive charge creates a negative membrane potential. To balance this potential difference, negative chloride ions also exit the cell, through selective chloride channels. The loss of sodium and chloride ions compensates for the osmotic effect of the higher concentration of organic molecules inside the cell.[27]

Cells can deal with even larger osmotic changes by accumulating osmoprotectants such as betaines or trehalose in their cytosol.[27] Some of these molecules can allow cells to survive being completely dried out and allow an organism to enter a state of suspended animation called cryptobiosis.[28] In this state the cytosol and osmoprotectants become a glass-like solid that helps stabilize proteins and cell membranes from the damaging effects of desiccation.[29]

The low concentration of calcium in the cytosol allows calcium ions to function as a second messenger in calcium signaling. Here, a signal such as a hormone or an action potential opens calcium channel so that calcium floods into the cytosol.[30] This sudden increase in cytosolic calcium activates other signalling molecules, such as calmodulin and protein kinase C.[31] Other ions such as chloride and potassium may also have signaling functions in the cytosol, but these are not well understood.[32]

Macromolecules

Protein molecules that do not bind to cell membranes or the cytoskeleton are dissolved in the cytosol. The amount of protein in cells is extremely high, and approaches 200 mg/ml, occupying about 20–30% of the volume of the cytosol.[1] However, measuring precisely how much protein is dissolved in cytosol in intact cells is difficult, since some proteins appear to be weakly associated with membranes or organelles in whole cells and are released into solution upon cell lysis.[5] Indeed, in experiments where the plasma membrane of cells were carefully disrupted using saponin, without damaging the other cell membranes, only about one quarter of cell protein was released. These cells were also able to synthesize proteins if given ATP and amino acids, implying that many of the enzymes in cytosol are bound to the cytoskeleton.[33] However, the idea that the majority of the proteins in cells are tightly bound in a network called the microtrabecular lattice is now seen as unlikely.[34]

In prokaryotes the cytosol contains the cell's genome, within a structure known as a nucleoid.[35] This is an irregular mass of DNA and associated proteins that control the transcription and replication of the bacterial chromosome and plasmids. In eukaryotes the genome is held within the cell nucleus, which is separated from the cytosol by nuclear pores that block the free diffusion of any molecule larger than about 10 nanometres in diameter.[36]

This high concentration of macromolecules in cytosol causes an effect called macromolecular crowding, which is when the effective concentration of other macromolecules is increased, since they have less volume to move in. This crowding effect can produce large changes in both the rates and the position of chemical equilibrium of reactions in the cytosol.[1] It is particularly important in its ability to alter dissociation constants by favoring the association of macromolecules, such as when multiple proteins come together to form protein complexes, or when DNA-binding proteins bind to their targets in the genome.[37]

Organization

Although the components of the cytosol are not separated into regions by cell membranes, these components do not always mix randomly and several levels of organization can localize specific molecules to defined sites within the cytosol.[38]

Concentration gradients

Although small molecules diffuse rapidly in the cytosol, concentration gradients can still be produced within this compartment. A well-studied example of these are the "calcium sparks" that are produced for a short period in the region around an open calcium channel.[39] These are about 2 micrometres in diameter and last for only a few milliseconds, although several sparks can merge to form larger gradients, called "calcium waves".[40] Concentration gradients of other small molecules, such as oxygen and adenosine triphosphate may be produced in cells around clusters of mitochondria, although these are less well understood.[41][42]

Protein complexes

Proteins can associate to form protein complexes, these often contain a set of proteins with similar functions, such as enzymes that carry out several steps in the same metabolic pathway.[43] This organization can allow substrate channeling, which is when the product of one enzyme is passed directly to the next enzyme in a pathway without being released into solution.[44] Channeling can make a pathway more rapid and efficient than it would be if the enzymes were randomly distributed in the cytosol, and can also prevent the release of unstable reaction intermediates.[45] Although a wide variety of metabolic pathways involve enzymes that are tightly bound to each other, others may involve more loosely associated complexes that are very difficult to study outside the cell.[46][47] Consequently, the importance of these complexes for metabolism in general remains unclear.

 
Carboxysomes are protein-enclosed bacterial microcompartments within the cytosol. On the left is an electron microscope image of carboxysomes, and on the right a model of their structure.

Protein compartments

Some protein complexes contain a large central cavity that is isolated from the remainder of the cytosol. One example of such an enclosed compartment is the proteasome.[48] Here, a set of subunits form a hollow barrel containing proteases that degrade cytosolic proteins. Since these would be damaging if they mixed freely with the remainder of the cytosol, the barrel is capped by a set of regulatory proteins that recognize proteins with a signal directing them for degradation (a ubiquitin tag) and feed them into the proteolytic cavity.[49]

Another large class of protein compartments are bacterial microcompartments, which are made of a protein shell that encapsulates various enzymes.[50] These compartments are typically about 100–200 nanometres across and made of interlocking proteins.[51] A well-understood example is the carboxysome, which contains enzymes involved in carbon fixation such as RuBisCO.[52]

Biomolecular condensates

Non-membrane bound organelles can form as biomolecular condensates, which arise by clustering, oligomerisation, or polymerisation of macromolecules to drive colloidal phase separation of the cytoplasm or nucleus.

Cytoskeletal sieving

Although the cytoskeleton is not part of the cytosol, the presence of this network of filaments restricts the diffusion of large particles in the cell. For example, in several studies tracer particles larger than about 25 nanometres (about the size of a ribosome)[53] were excluded from parts of the cytosol around the edges of the cell and next to the nucleus.[54][55] These "excluding compartments" may contain a much denser meshwork of actin fibres than the remainder of the cytosol. These microdomains could influence the distribution of large structures such as ribosomes and organelles within the cytosol by excluding them from some areas and concentrating them in others.[56]

Function

The cytosol is the site of multiple cell processes. Examples of these processes include signal transduction from the cell membrane to sites within the cell, such as the cell nucleus,[57] or organelles.[58] This compartment is also the site of many of the processes of cytokinesis, after the breakdown of the nuclear membrane in mitosis.[59] Another major function of cytosol is to transport metabolites from their site of production to where they are used. This is relatively simple for water-soluble molecules, such as amino acids, which can diffuse rapidly through the cytosol.[18] However, hydrophobic molecules, such as fatty acids or sterols, can be transported through the cytosol by specific binding proteins, which shuttle these molecules between cell membranes.[60][61] Molecules taken into the cell by endocytosis or on their way to be secreted can also be transported through the cytosol inside vesicles,[62] which are small spheres of lipids that are moved along the cytoskeleton by motor proteins.[63]

The cytosol is the site of most metabolism in prokaryotes,[9] and a large proportion of the metabolism of eukaryotes. For instance, in mammals about half of the proteins in the cell are localized to the cytosol.[64] The most complete data are available in yeast, where metabolic reconstructions indicate that the majority of both metabolic processes and metabolites occur in the cytosol.[65] Major metabolic pathways that occur in the cytosol in animals are protein biosynthesis, the pentose phosphate pathway, glycolysis and gluconeogenesis.[66] The localization of pathways can be different in other organisms, for instance fatty acid synthesis occurs in chloroplasts in plants[67][68] and in apicoplasts in apicomplexa.[69]

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  64. ^ Foster LJ, de Hoog CL, Zhang Y (April 2006). "A mammalian organelle map by protein correlation profiling". Cell. 125 (1): 187–99. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2006.03.022. PMID 16615899. S2CID 32197.
  65. ^ Herrgård, MJ; Swainston, N; Dobson, P; Dunn, WB; Arga, KY; Arvas, M; Blüthgen, N; Borger, S; Costenoble, R; et al. (October 2008). "A consensus yeast metabolic network reconstruction obtained from a community approach to systems biology". Nature Biotechnology. 26 (10): 1155–60. doi:10.1038/nbt1492. PMC 4018421. PMID 18846089.
  66. ^ Stryer, Lubert; Berg, Jeremy Mark; Tymoczko, John L. (2002). Biochemistry. San Francisco: W.H. Freeman. ISBN 0-7167-4684-0. OCLC 179705944.
  67. ^ Ohlrogge J, Pollard M, Bao X (December 2000). "Fatty acid synthesis: from CO2 to functional genomics". Biochem. Soc. Trans. 28 (6): 567–73. doi:10.1042/BST0280567. PMID 11171129.
  68. ^ Ohlrogge JB, Kuhn DN, Stumpf PK (March 1979). "Subcellular localization of acyl carrier protein in leaf protoplasts of Spinacia oleracea". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76 (3): 1194–8. Bibcode:1979PNAS...76.1194O. doi:10.1073/pnas.76.3.1194. PMC 383216. PMID 286305.
  69. ^ Goodman CD, McFadden GI (January 2007). "Fatty acid biosynthesis as a drug target in apicomplexan parasites". Curr Drug Targets. 8 (1): 15–30. doi:10.2174/138945007779315579. PMID 17266528. S2CID 2565225.

Further reading

  • Wheatley, Denys N.; Pollack, Gerald H.; Cameron, Ivan L. (2006). Water and the Cell. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 1-4020-4926-9. OCLC 71298997.

cytosol, cytosol, also, known, cytoplasmic, matrix, groundplasm, liquids, found, inside, cells, intracellular, fluid, separated, into, compartments, membranes, example, mitochondrial, matrix, separates, mitochondrion, into, many, compartments, cytosol, crowded. The cytosol also known as cytoplasmic matrix or groundplasm 2 is one of the liquids found inside cells intracellular fluid ICF 3 It is separated into compartments by membranes For example the mitochondrial matrix separates the mitochondrion into many compartments The cytosol is a crowded solution of many different types of molecules that occupy up to 30 of the cytoplasmic volume 1 Cell biologyAnimal cell diagramComponents of a typical animal cell Nucleolus Nucleus Ribosome dots as part of 5 Vesicle Rough endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus or Golgi body Cytoskeleton Smooth endoplasmic reticulum Mitochondrion Vacuole Cytosol fluid that contains organelles with which comprises cytoplasm Lysosome Centrosome Cell membraneIn the eukaryotic cell the cytosol is surrounded by the cell membrane and is part of the cytoplasm which also comprises the mitochondria plastids and other organelles but not their internal fluids and structures the cell nucleus is separate The cytosol is thus a liquid matrix around the organelles In prokaryotes most of the chemical reactions of metabolism take place in the cytosol while a few take place in membranes or in the periplasmic space In eukaryotes while many metabolic pathways still occur in the cytosol others take place within organelles The cytosol is a complex mixture of substances dissolved in water Although water forms the large majority of the cytosol its structure and properties within cells is not well understood The concentrations of ions such as sodium and potassium in the cytosol are different to those in the extracellular fluid these differences in ion levels are important in processes such as osmoregulation cell signaling and the generation of action potentials in excitable cells such as endocrine nerve and muscle cells The cytosol also contains large amounts of macromolecules which can alter how molecules behave through macromolecular crowding Although it was once thought to be a simple solution of molecules the cytosol has multiple levels of organization These include concentration gradients of small molecules such as calcium large complexes of enzymes that act together and take part in metabolic pathways and protein complexes such as proteasomes and carboxysomes that enclose and separate parts of the cytosol Contents 1 Definition 2 Properties and composition 2 1 Water 2 2 Ions 2 3 Macromolecules 3 Organization 3 1 Concentration gradients 3 2 Protein complexes 3 3 Protein compartments 3 4 Biomolecular condensates 3 5 Cytoskeletal sieving 4 Function 5 References 6 Further readingDefinition EditThe term cytosol was first introduced in 1965 by H A Lardy and initially referred to the liquid that was produced by breaking cells apart and pelleting all the insoluble components by ultracentrifugation 4 5 Such a soluble cell extract is not identical to the soluble part of the cell cytoplasm and is usually called a cytoplasmic fraction 6 The term cytosol is now used to refer to the liquid phase of the cytoplasm in an intact cell 6 This excludes any part of the cytoplasm that is contained within organelles 7 Due to the possibility of confusion between the use of the word cytosol to refer to both extracts of cells and the soluble part of the cytoplasm in intact cells the phrase aqueous cytoplasm has been used to describe the liquid contents of the cytoplasm of living cells 5 Prior to this other terms including hyaloplasm 8 were used for the cell fluid not always synonymously as its nature was not very clear see protoplasm 6 Properties and composition Edit Intracellular fluid content in humans The proportion of cell volume that is cytosol varies for example while this compartment forms the bulk of cell structure in bacteria 9 in plant cells the main compartment is the large central vacuole 10 The cytosol consists mostly of water dissolved ions small molecules and large water soluble molecules such as proteins The majority of these non protein molecules have a molecular mass of less than 300 Da 11 This mixture of small molecules is extraordinarily complex as the variety of molecules that are involved in metabolism the metabolites is immense For example up to 200 000 different small molecules might be made in plants although not all these will be present in the same species or in a single cell 12 Estimates of the number of metabolites in single cells such as E coli and baker s yeast predict that under 1 000 are made 13 14 Water Edit Most of the cytosol is water which makes up about 70 of the total volume of a typical cell 15 The pH of the intracellular fluid is 7 4 16 while human cytosolic pH ranges between 7 0 7 4 and is usually higher if a cell is growing 17 The viscosity of cytoplasm is roughly the same as pure water although diffusion of small molecules through this liquid is about fourfold slower than in pure water due mostly to collisions with the large numbers of macromolecules in the cytosol 18 Studies in the brine shrimp have examined how water affects cell functions these saw that a 20 reduction in the amount of water in a cell inhibits metabolism with metabolism decreasing progressively as the cell dries out and all metabolic activity halting when the water level reaches 70 below normal 5 Although water is vital for life the structure of this water in the cytosol is not well understood mostly because methods such as nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy only give information on the average structure of water and cannot measure local variations at the microscopic scale Even the structure of pure water is poorly understood due to the ability of water to form structures such as water clusters through hydrogen bonds 19 The classic view of water in cells is that about 5 of this water is strongly bound in by solutes or macromolecules as water of solvation while the majority has the same structure as pure water 5 This water of solvation is not active in osmosis and may have different solvent properties so that some dissolved molecules are excluded while others become concentrated 20 21 However others argue that the effects of the high concentrations of macromolecules in cells extend throughout the cytosol and that water in cells behaves very differently from the water in dilute solutions 22 These ideas include the proposal that cells contain zones of low and high density water which could have widespread effects on the structures and functions of the other parts of the cell 19 23 However the use of advanced nuclear magnetic resonance methods to directly measure the mobility of water in living cells contradicts this idea as it suggests that 85 of cell water acts like that pure water while the remainder is less mobile and probably bound to macromolecules 24 Ions Edit The concentrations of the other ions in cytosol are quite different from those in extracellular fluid and the cytosol also contains much higher amounts of charged macromolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids than the outside of the cell structure Typical ion concentrations in mammalian cytosol and plasma 7 Ion Concentration millimolar In cytosol In plasmaPotassium 139 150 25 26 4Sodium 12 145Chloride 4 116Bicarbonate 12 29Amino acids in proteins 138 9Magnesium 0 8 1 5Calcium lt 0 0002 1 8In contrast to extracellular fluid cytosol has a high concentration of potassium ions and a low concentration of sodium ions 27 This difference in ion concentrations is critical for osmoregulation since if the ion levels were the same inside a cell as outside water would enter constantly by osmosis since the levels of macromolecules inside cells are higher than their levels outside Instead sodium ions are expelled and potassium ions taken up by the Na K ATPase potassium ions then flow down their concentration gradient through potassium selection ion channels this loss of positive charge creates a negative membrane potential To balance this potential difference negative chloride ions also exit the cell through selective chloride channels The loss of sodium and chloride ions compensates for the osmotic effect of the higher concentration of organic molecules inside the cell 27 Cells can deal with even larger osmotic changes by accumulating osmoprotectants such as betaines or trehalose in their cytosol 27 Some of these molecules can allow cells to survive being completely dried out and allow an organism to enter a state of suspended animation called cryptobiosis 28 In this state the cytosol and osmoprotectants become a glass like solid that helps stabilize proteins and cell membranes from the damaging effects of desiccation 29 The low concentration of calcium in the cytosol allows calcium ions to function as a second messenger in calcium signaling Here a signal such as a hormone or an action potential opens calcium channel so that calcium floods into the cytosol 30 This sudden increase in cytosolic calcium activates other signalling molecules such as calmodulin and protein kinase C 31 Other ions such as chloride and potassium may also have signaling functions in the cytosol but these are not well understood 32 Macromolecules Edit Protein molecules that do not bind to cell membranes or the cytoskeleton are dissolved in the cytosol The amount of protein in cells is extremely high and approaches 200 mg ml occupying about 20 30 of the volume of the cytosol 1 However measuring precisely how much protein is dissolved in cytosol in intact cells is difficult since some proteins appear to be weakly associated with membranes or organelles in whole cells and are released into solution upon cell lysis 5 Indeed in experiments where the plasma membrane of cells were carefully disrupted using saponin without damaging the other cell membranes only about one quarter of cell protein was released These cells were also able to synthesize proteins if given ATP and amino acids implying that many of the enzymes in cytosol are bound to the cytoskeleton 33 However the idea that the majority of the proteins in cells are tightly bound in a network called the microtrabecular lattice is now seen as unlikely 34 In prokaryotes the cytosol contains the cell s genome within a structure known as a nucleoid 35 This is an irregular mass of DNA and associated proteins that control the transcription and replication of the bacterial chromosome and plasmids In eukaryotes the genome is held within the cell nucleus which is separated from the cytosol by nuclear pores that block the free diffusion of any molecule larger than about 10 nanometres in diameter 36 This high concentration of macromolecules in cytosol causes an effect called macromolecular crowding which is when the effective concentration of other macromolecules is increased since they have less volume to move in This crowding effect can produce large changes in both the rates and the position of chemical equilibrium of reactions in the cytosol 1 It is particularly important in its ability to alter dissociation constants by favoring the association of macromolecules such as when multiple proteins come together to form protein complexes or when DNA binding proteins bind to their targets in the genome 37 Organization EditAlthough the components of the cytosol are not separated into regions by cell membranes these components do not always mix randomly and several levels of organization can localize specific molecules to defined sites within the cytosol 38 Concentration gradients Edit Although small molecules diffuse rapidly in the cytosol concentration gradients can still be produced within this compartment A well studied example of these are the calcium sparks that are produced for a short period in the region around an open calcium channel 39 These are about 2 micrometres in diameter and last for only a few milliseconds although several sparks can merge to form larger gradients called calcium waves 40 Concentration gradients of other small molecules such as oxygen and adenosine triphosphate may be produced in cells around clusters of mitochondria although these are less well understood 41 42 Protein complexes Edit Proteins can associate to form protein complexes these often contain a set of proteins with similar functions such as enzymes that carry out several steps in the same metabolic pathway 43 This organization can allow substrate channeling which is when the product of one enzyme is passed directly to the next enzyme in a pathway without being released into solution 44 Channeling can make a pathway more rapid and efficient than it would be if the enzymes were randomly distributed in the cytosol and can also prevent the release of unstable reaction intermediates 45 Although a wide variety of metabolic pathways involve enzymes that are tightly bound to each other others may involve more loosely associated complexes that are very difficult to study outside the cell 46 47 Consequently the importance of these complexes for metabolism in general remains unclear Carboxysomes are protein enclosed bacterial microcompartments within the cytosol On the left is an electron microscope image of carboxysomes and on the right a model of their structure Protein compartments Edit Some protein complexes contain a large central cavity that is isolated from the remainder of the cytosol One example of such an enclosed compartment is the proteasome 48 Here a set of subunits form a hollow barrel containing proteases that degrade cytosolic proteins Since these would be damaging if they mixed freely with the remainder of the cytosol the barrel is capped by a set of regulatory proteins that recognize proteins with a signal directing them for degradation a ubiquitin tag and feed them into the proteolytic cavity 49 Another large class of protein compartments are bacterial microcompartments which are made of a protein shell that encapsulates various enzymes 50 These compartments are typically about 100 200 nanometres across and made of interlocking proteins 51 A well understood example is the carboxysome which contains enzymes involved in carbon fixation such as RuBisCO 52 Biomolecular condensates Edit Non membrane bound organelles can form as biomolecular condensates which arise by clustering oligomerisation or polymerisation of macromolecules to drive colloidal phase separation of the cytoplasm or nucleus Cytoskeletal sieving Edit Although the cytoskeleton is not part of the cytosol the presence of this network of filaments restricts the diffusion of large particles in the cell For example in several studies tracer particles larger than about 25 nanometres about the size of a ribosome 53 were excluded from parts of the cytosol around the edges of the cell and next to the nucleus 54 55 These excluding compartments may contain a much denser meshwork of actin fibres than the remainder of the cytosol These microdomains could influence the distribution of large structures such as ribosomes and organelles within the cytosol by excluding them from some areas and concentrating them in others 56 Function EditThe cytosol is the site of multiple cell processes Examples of these processes include signal transduction from the cell membrane to sites within the cell such as the cell nucleus 57 or organelles 58 This compartment is also the site of many of the processes of cytokinesis after the breakdown of the nuclear membrane in mitosis 59 Another major function of cytosol is to transport metabolites from their site of production to where they are used This is relatively simple for water soluble molecules such as amino acids which can diffuse rapidly through the cytosol 18 However hydrophobic molecules such as fatty acids or sterols can be transported through the cytosol by specific binding proteins which shuttle these molecules between cell membranes 60 61 Molecules taken into the cell by endocytosis or on their way to be secreted can also be transported through the cytosol inside vesicles 62 which are small spheres of lipids that are moved along the cytoskeleton by motor proteins 63 The cytosol is the site of most metabolism in prokaryotes 9 and a large proportion of the metabolism of eukaryotes For instance in mammals about half of the proteins in the cell are localized to the cytosol 64 The most complete data are available in yeast where metabolic reconstructions indicate that the majority of both metabolic processes and metabolites occur in the cytosol 65 Major metabolic pathways that occur in the cytosol in animals are protein biosynthesis the pentose phosphate pathway glycolysis and gluconeogenesis 66 The localization of pathways can be different in other organisms for instance fatty acid synthesis occurs in chloroplasts in plants 67 68 and in apicoplasts in apicomplexa 69 References Edit a b c Ellis RJ October 2001 Macromolecular crowding obvious but underappreciated Trends Biochem Sci 26 10 597 604 doi 10 1016 S0968 0004 01 01938 7 PMID 11590012 Cammack Richard Atwood Teresa Campbell Peter Parish Howard Smith Anthony Vella Frank Stirling John 2006 Cammack Richard Atwood Teresa Campbell 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proteins sorted Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 354 1388 1471 8 doi 10 1098 rstb 1999 0491 PMC 1692657 PMID 10515003 Kamal A Goldstein LS February 2002 Principles of cargo attachment to cytoplasmic motor proteins Curr Opin Cell Biol 14 1 63 8 doi 10 1016 S0955 0674 01 00295 2 PMID 11792546 Foster LJ de Hoog CL Zhang Y April 2006 A mammalian organelle map by protein correlation profiling Cell 125 1 187 99 doi 10 1016 j cell 2006 03 022 PMID 16615899 S2CID 32197 Herrgard MJ Swainston N Dobson P Dunn WB Arga KY Arvas M Bluthgen N Borger S Costenoble R et al October 2008 A consensus yeast metabolic network reconstruction obtained from a community approach to systems biology Nature Biotechnology 26 10 1155 60 doi 10 1038 nbt1492 PMC 4018421 PMID 18846089 Stryer Lubert Berg Jeremy Mark Tymoczko John L 2002 Biochemistry San Francisco W H Freeman ISBN 0 7167 4684 0 OCLC 179705944 Ohlrogge J Pollard M Bao X December 2000 Fatty acid synthesis from CO2 to functional genomics Biochem Soc Trans 28 6 567 73 doi 10 1042 BST0280567 PMID 11171129 Ohlrogge JB Kuhn DN Stumpf PK March 1979 Subcellular localization of acyl carrier protein in leaf protoplasts of Spinacia oleracea Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 76 3 1194 8 Bibcode 1979PNAS 76 1194O doi 10 1073 pnas 76 3 1194 PMC 383216 PMID 286305 Goodman CD McFadden GI January 2007 Fatty acid biosynthesis as a drug target in apicomplexan parasites Curr Drug Targets 8 1 15 30 doi 10 2174 138945007779315579 PMID 17266528 S2CID 2565225 Further reading EditWheatley Denys N Pollack Gerald H Cameron Ivan L 2006 Water and the Cell Berlin Springer ISBN 1 4020 4926 9 OCLC 71298997 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cytosol amp oldid 1141625647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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