Abstract
Adaption to environmental conditions is reflected by protein adaptation. In particular, proteins of extremophiles display distinctive traits ensuring functional, structural and dynamical properties under permanently extreme physical and chemical conditions. While it has mostly been studied with approaches focusing on specific proteins, biophysical approaches have also confirmed this link between environmental and protein adaptation at the more complex and diverse scale of the proteome. However, studies of this type remain challenging and often require large amounts of biological material. We report here the use of nanoDSF as a tool to study proteome stability and solubility in cell lysates of the model halophilic archaeon Haloarcula marismortui. Notably, our results show that, as with single halophilic protein studies, proteome stability was correlated to the concentration of NaCl or KCl under which the cells were lysed and hence the proteome exposed. This work highlights that adaptation to environmental conditions can be experimentally observed at the scale of the proteome. Still, we show that the biochemical properties of single halophilic proteins can only be partially extrapolated to the whole proteome.
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