We have investigated the self-assembly of a strong dipolar molecule (LDipCC) on the semiconducting Si(111)-B surface with scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), density functional theory (DFT) calculations and STM simulations. Although...
Bacterial microcompartments (BMC) are complex macromolecular assemblies that participate to varied chemical processes in about one fourth of bacterial species. BMC-encapsulated enzymatic activities are segregated from other cell contents by means of semipermeable shells, justifying why BMC are viewed as prototype nano-reactors for biotechnological applications. Herein, we undertook a comparative study of trends of self-assembly of BMC hexamers (BMC-H), the most abundant shell constituents. Published and new microscopy data show that some BMC-H, likeβ-carboxysomal CcmK, tend to assemble flat whereas other BMC-H often build curved-implying objects. Inspection of available crystal structures presenting BMC-H in tiled arrangements permitted to identify two major assembly modes with a striking connection with experimental trends. All-atom molecular dynamics (MD) supported that BMC-H bending is triggered robustly only from the disposition adopted by BMC-H that form curved objects experimentally, conducting to almost identical arrangements to those found in structures of recomposed BMC shells. Simulations on ensembles of planar-behaving hexamers, which were previously reconfigured to comply with such disposition, confirmed that bending is defined by assembly details, rather than by BMC-H identity. Finally, although no common atomic determinants could be identified as responsible of BMC-H spontaneous curvature, an inter-hexamer ionic pair was pinpointed as contributor to hold a subset of BMC-H in low bending dispositions. These results are expected to improve our understanding of the variable mechanisms of biogenesis characterized for BMC, and of possible strategies to regulate BMC size and shape.
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