Mechanistic dissection of increased enzymatic rate in a phase-separated compartment
Biomolecular condensates concentrate macromolecules into discrete cellular foci without an encapsulating membrane. Condensates are often presumed to increase enzymatic reaction rates through increased concentrations of enzymes and substrates (mass action), although this idea has not been widely tes...
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Zusammenfassung: | Biomolecular condensates concentrate macromolecules into discrete cellular
foci without an encapsulating membrane. Condensates are often presumed to
increase enzymatic reaction rates through increased concentrations of
enzymes and substrates (mass action), although this idea has not been
widely tested and other mechanisms of modulation are possible. Here we
describe a synthetic system where the SUMOylation enzyme cascade is
recruited into engineered condensates generated by liquid-liquid phase
separation of multidomain scaffolding proteins. SUMOylation rates can be
increased up to 36-fold in these droplets compared to the surrounding
bulk, depending on substrate KM. This dependency produces substantial
specificity among different substrates. Analyses of reactions above and
below the phase separation threshold lead to a quantitative model in which
reactions in condensates are accelerated by mass action and by changes in
substrate KM, likely due to scaffold-induced molecular organization. Thus,
condensates can modulate reaction rates both by concentrating molecules
and by physically organizing them. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.sj3tx9636 |