Systematic discovery of biomolecular condensate-specific protein phosphorylation

Reversible protein phosphorylation is an important mechanism for regulating (dis)assembly of biomolecular condensates. However, condensate-specific phosphosites remain largely unknown, thereby limiting our understanding of the underlying mechanisms. Here, we combine solubility proteome profiling wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemical biology 2022-10, Vol.18 (10), p.1104-1114
Hauptverfasser: Sridharan, Sindhuja, Hernandez-Armendariz, Alberto, Kurzawa, Nils, Potel, Clement M., Memon, Danish, Beltrao, Pedro, Bantscheff, Marcus, Huber, Wolfgang, Cuylen-Haering, Sara, Savitski, Mikhail M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Reversible protein phosphorylation is an important mechanism for regulating (dis)assembly of biomolecular condensates. However, condensate-specific phosphosites remain largely unknown, thereby limiting our understanding of the underlying mechanisms. Here, we combine solubility proteome profiling with phosphoproteomics to quantitatively map several hundred phosphosites enriched in either soluble or condensate-bound protein subpopulations, including a subset of phosphosites modulating protein–RNA interactions. We show that multi-phosphorylation of the C-terminal disordered segment of heteronuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (HNRNPA1), a key RNA-splicing factor, reduces its ability to locate to nuclear clusters. For nucleophosmin 1 (NPM1), an essential nucleolar protein, we show that phosphorylation of S254 and S260 is crucial for lowering its partitioning to the nucleolus and additional phosphorylation of distal sites enhances its retention in the nucleoplasm. These phosphorylation events decrease RNA and protein interactions of NPM1 to regulate its condensation. Our dataset is a rich resource for systematically uncovering the phosphoregulation of biomolecular condensates. A combination of solubility proteome profiling with phosphoproteomics enables systematic analysis of the phosphorylation status of proteins in soluble and condensate-bound pools.
ISSN:1552-4450
1552-4469
1552-4469
DOI:10.1038/s41589-022-01062-y