universality of thermodynamic constants governing biological growth rates普遍性管理生物热力学常数增长率.pdf
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Universality of Thermodynamic Constants Governing
Biological Growth Rates
Ross Corkrey*, June Olley, David Ratkowsky, Tom McMeekin, Tom Ross
Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture/School of Agricultural Science, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Abstract
Background: Mathematical models exist that quantify the effect of temperature on poikilotherm growth rate. One family of
such models assumes a single rate-limiting ‘master reaction’ using terms describing the temperature-dependent
denaturation of the reaction’s enzyme. We consider whether such a model can describe growth in each domain of life.
Methodology/Principal Findings: A new model based on this assumption and using a hierarchical Bayesian approach fits
simultaneously 95 data sets for temperature-related growth rates of diverse microorganisms from all three domains of life,
Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya. Remarkably, the model produces credible estimates of fundamental thermodynamic
parameters describing protein thermal stability predicted over 20 years ago.
Conclusions/Significance: The analysis lends support to the concept of universal thermodynamic limits to microbial growth
rate dictated by protein thermal stability that in turn govern biological rates. This suggests that the thermal stability of
proteins is a unifying property in the evolution and adaptation of life on earth. The fundamental nature of this conclusion
has importance for many fields of study including microbiology, protein chemistry, thermal biology, and ecological theory
including, for example, the influence of the vast microbial biomass and activity in the biosphere that is poorly described in
current climate models.
Citation: Corkrey R, Olley J, Ratkowsky D, McMeekin T, Ross T (2012) Universality of Thermodynamic Constants Governing Biological Growth R
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