Mesoscale properties of protein clusters determine the size and nature of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS)

ORAL

Abstract

The observation of Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation (LLPS) in biological cells has dramatically shifted the paradigm that soluble proteins are uniformly dispersed in the cytoplasm or nucleoplasm. The LLPS region is preceded by a one-phase solution, where recent experiments have identified clusters in an aqueous solution with 102-103 proteins. Here, we theoretically consider a core-shell model with mesoscale bulk, surface, and bending properties of the clusters’ shell and contrast two experimental paradigms for the measured cluster size distributions of the Cytoplasmic Polyadenylation Element Binding-4 (CPEB4) and Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) proteins. The fits to the theoretical model and earlier EPR experiments suggest that the same protein may exhibit hydrophilic, hydrophobic, and amphiphilic conformations, which act to stabilize the clusters. We find that CPEB4 clusters are much more stable compared to FUS clusters, which are less energetically favorable. This suggests that in CPEB4, LLPS consists of large-scale aggregates of clusters, while for FUS, clusters coalesce to form micron-scale LLPS domains.

*SS and AH are grateful for a grant from the Volkswagen Foundation 197/98

Publication: 1. Mesoscale properties of protein clusters determine the size and nature of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) - submitted
2. Core-shell model of the clusters of CPEB4 isoforms preceding liquid-liquid phase separation - Biophys. J. , 2023

Presenters

  • Gonen Golani

    • University of Haifa

Authors

  • Samuel A Safran

    • Weizmann Institute of Science
  • Gonen Golani

    • University of Haifa
  • Anthony A Hyman

    • Max Planck Institute of Cell Biology and Genetics
  • Daniella Goldfarb

    • Weizmann Institute of Science
  • Manas Seal

    • Weizmann Institute of Science
  • Mrityunjoy Kar

    • Institute of Biofunctional Polymer Materials, Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research