PROJECT SUMMARY Our long-term goal is to understand how microbes are able to withstand remarkable extremes of temperature, pressure, and chemical composition (P-T-X), by determining how the macromolecular structures comprising the microbes are preserved. Our focus is on the effects of high pressure, which are much less understood than those of temperature. Since high-pressure methods are increasingly being used for food preservation, understanding the effects of pressure is important for human health and welfare. Disturbingly, some mesophilic microbes appear to able to withstand ~10 kbar pressures, while piezophilic (pressure-loving) microbes have been found at maximum pressures of ~1.1 kbar. Determining what pressures will disrupt structures of proteins in cell-like conditions will help to define the limiting pressures that microbes can grow at. Our goal for the proposed work is to understand the interplay of P-T effects on proteins by examining enzymes from psychrophiles (cold-loving) and thermophiles (hot-loving) that are also piezophilic at different P-T. Based on our previous work on a piezophilic psychrophile enzyme, microbes may be mainly adapted for temperature rather than high pressure and enzymes from psychrophiles appear much more fragile than those from thermophiles. The proposed studies will expand the range of growth temperatures of the source organisms to piezophilic thermophile enzymes. They will also address the effects of piezolytes, which are osmolytes that protect against pressure effects, on proteins. Our approach uses molecular dynamics computer simulations and biophysical experiments. Our specific aims are to: Aim 1. Understand piezophilicity in other psychrophile enzymes. Aim 2. Understand piezophilicity in thermophile enzymes. Aim 3. Understand how piezolytes change pressure effects on proteins.