Intracellular phase separation of globular proteins facilitated by short cationic peptides

Phase separation provides intracellular organization and underlies a variety of cellular processes. These biomolecular condensates exhibit distinct physical and material properties. Current strategies for engineering condensate formation include using intrinsically disordered domains and altering pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-12, Vol.13 (1), p.7882-10, Article 7882
Hauptverfasser: Yeong, Vivian, Wang, Jou-wen, Horn, Justin M., Obermeyer, Allie C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Phase separation provides intracellular organization and underlies a variety of cellular processes. These biomolecular condensates exhibit distinct physical and material properties. Current strategies for engineering condensate formation include using intrinsically disordered domains and altering protein surface charge by chemical supercharging or site-specific mutagenesis. We propose adding to this toolbox designer peptide tags that provide several potential advantages for engineering protein phase separation in bacteria. Herein, we demonstrate the use of short cationic peptide tags for sequestration of proteins of interest into bacterial condensates and provide a foundational study for their development as tools for condensate engineering. Using a panel of GFP variants, we demonstrate how cationic tag and globular domain charge contribute to intracellular phase separation in E. coli and observe that the tag can affect condensate disassembly at a given net charge near the phase separation boundary. We showcase the broad applicability of these tags by appending them onto enzymes and demonstrating that the sequestered enzymes remain catalytically active. Phase separation provides intracellular organisation via membraneless entities called biomolecular condensates. Here, the authors show that short, cationic peptide tags can drive biomolecular condensation of engineered proteins in E. coli through associative interactions with RNA.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-35529-2