Water is essential for life on Earth. In its absence, however, some organisms can interrupt their life cycle and temporarily enter an ametabolic state, known as anhydrobiosis [1]. It is assumed that sugars (in particular trehalose) are instrumental for survival under anhydrobiotic conditions [2]. However, the role of trehalose remained obscure because the corresponding evidence was purely correlative and based mostly on in vitro studies without any genetic manipulations of trehalose metabolism. In this study, we used C. elegans as a genetic model to investigate molecular mechanisms of anhydrobiosis. We show that the C. elegans dauer larva is a true anhydrobiote: under defined conditions it can survive even after losing 98% of its body water. This ability is correlated with a several fold increase in the amount of trehalose. Mutants unable to synthesize trehalose cannot survive even mild dehydration. Light and electron microscopy indicate that one of the major functions of trehalose is the preservation of membrane organization. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy of whole worms suggests that this is achieved by preserving homogeneous and compact packing of lipid acyl chains. By means of infrared spectroscopy, we can now distinguish a "dry, yet alive" larva from a "dry and dead" one.
The conformational substates B(I) and B(II) of the phosphodiester backbone in B-DNA are thought to contribute to DNA flexibility and protein recognition. We have studied by rapid scan FTIR spectroscopy the isothermal B(I)-B(II) transition on its intrinsic time scale. Correlation analysis of IR absorption changes occurring within seconds after a reversible incremental growth of the DNA hydration shell identifies water populations w(1) (PO(2)(-)-bound) and w(2) (non-PO(2)(-)-bound) exhibiting weaker and stronger H-bonds, respectively, than those dominating in bulk water. The B(II) substate is stabilized by w(2). The water H-bond imbalance of 3-4 kJ mol(-1) is equalized at little enthalpic cost upon formation of a contiguous water network (at 12-14 H(2)O molecules per DNA phosphate) of reduced ν(OH) bandwidth. In this state, hydration water cooperatively stabilizes the B(I) conformer via the entropically favored replacement of w(2)-DNA interactions by additional w(2)-water contacts, rather than binding to B(I)-specific hydration sites. Such water rearrangements contribute to the recognition of DNA by indolicidin, an antimicrobial 13-mer peptide from bovine neutrophils which, despite little intrinsic structure, preferentially binds to the B(I) conformer in a water-mediated induced fit. The FTIR spectra resolve sequential steps leading from PO(2)(-)-solvation to substate transition and eventually to base stacking changes in the complex. In combination with CD-spectral titrations, the data indicate that, in the absence of a bulk aqueous phase, as in molecular crowded environments, water relocation within the DNA hydration shell allows for entropic contributions similar to those assigned to water upon DNA ligand recognition in solution.
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