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Biophysical Journal 58: 483-491 (1990)
© 1990 the Biophysical Society

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Intracellular water in Artemia cysts (brine shrimp)

Investigations by deuterium and oxygen-17 nuclear magnetic resonance

S. R. Kasturi *, P. K. Seitz {ddagger}, D. C. Chang § and C. F. Hazlewood §

Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Bombay 400 005, India
Department of Pharmacology, University of Texas, Galveston, Texas 77550
Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030 USA

ABSTRACT

The dormant cysts of Artemia undergo cycles of hydration-dehydration without losing viability. Therefore, Artemia cysts serve as an excellent intact cellular system for studying the dynamics of water-protein interactions as a function of hydration. Deuterium spin-lattice (T1) and spin-spin (T2) relaxation times of water in cysts hydrated with D2O have been measured for hydrations between 1.5 and 0.1 g of D2O per gram of dry solids. When the relaxation rates (I/T1, I/T2) of 2H and 17O are plotted as a function of the reciprocal of hydration (1/H), an abrupt change in slope is observed near 0.6 g of D2O (or H2 17O)/gram of dry solids, the hydration at which conventional metabolism is activated in this system. The results have been discussed in terms of the two-site and multisite exchange models for the water-protein interaction as well as protein dynamics models. The 2H and 17O relaxation rates as a function of hydration show striking similarities to those observed for anisotropic motion of water molecules in protein crystals.

It is suggested here that although the simple two-site exchange model or n-site exchange model could be used to explain our data at high hydration levels, such models are not adequate at low hydration levels (<0.6 g H2O/g) where several complex interactions between water and proteins play a predominant role in the relaxation of water nuclei. We further suggest that the abrupt change in the slope of I/T1 as a function of hydration in the vicinity of 0.6 g H2O/g is due to a change in water-protein interactions resulting from a variation in the dynamics of protein motion.







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Copyright © 1990 by the Biophysical Society.