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Osmolyte
Organic compounds that influence the properties of biological fluids
Organic compounds that influence the properties of biological fluids
Osmolytes are low-molecular-weight organic compounds that influence the properties of biological fluids. Osmolytes are a class of organic molecules that play a significant role in regulating osmotic pressure and maintaining cellular homeostasis in various organisms, particularly in response to environmental stressors.{{cite journal|title=Organic osmolytes as compatible, metabolic and counteracting cytoprotectants in high osmolarity and other stresses|author=Paul H. Yancey|journal=Journal of Experimental Biology|year=2005|volume=208|issue=15|pages= 2819–2830| doi=10.1242/jeb.01730|pmid=16043587|doi-access=free|bibcode=2005JExpB.208.2819Y }} Their primary role is to maintain the integrity of cells by affecting the viscosity, melting point, and ionic strength of the aqueous solution. When a cell swells due to external osmotic pressure, membrane channels open and allow efflux of osmolytes carrying water, restoring normal cell volume.
These molecules are involved in counteracting the effects of osmotic stress, which occurs when there are fluctuations in the concentration of solutes (such as ions and sugars) inside and outside cells. Osmolytes help cells adapt to changing osmotic conditions, thereby ensuring their survival and functionality. Osmolytes also interact with the constituents of the cell, e.g., they influence protein folding. Common osmolytes include amino acids, sugars and polyols, methylamines, methylsulfonium compounds, and urea.
Case studies
Natural osmolytes that can act as osmoprotectants include trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), dimethylsulfoniopropionate, sarcosine, betaine, glycerophosphorylcholine, myo-inositol, taurine, glycine, and others.{{Cite journal
Osmolytes are present in the cells of fish, and function to protect the cells from water pressure. As the osmolyte concentration in fish cells scales linearly with pressure and therefore depth, osmolytes have been used to calculate the maximum depth where a fish can survive. Fish cells reach a maximum concentration of osmolytes at depths of approximately 26,900 ft, with no fish ever being observed beyond 27,349 ft.
References
References
- ''Review of Medical Physiology'', William F. Ganong, McGraw-Hill Medical, {{ISBN. 978-0-07-144040-0.
- (2001). "The osmophobic effect: natural selection of a thermodynamic force in protein folding". [[Journal of Molecular Biology]].
- Su, Zhaoqian. (2017). "Roles of cosolvents on protein stability". Dissertations.
- (1985). "The stabilization of proteins by osmolytes". [[Biophysical Journal]].
- Csonka LN. (1989). "Physiological and genetic responses of bacteria to osmotic stress". [[Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews]].
- (2014). "Marine fish may be biochemically constrained from inhabiting the deepest ocean depths". PNAS.
- Lu, Donna. (3 April 2023). "Scientists find deepest fish ever recorded at 8,300 metres underwater near Japan". The Guardian.
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