4.8 Article

Coexisting Liquid Phases Underlie Nucleolar Subcompartments

Journal

CELL
Volume 165, Issue 7, Pages 1686-1697

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.04.047

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Princeton Center for Complex Materials, a MRSEC - NSF [DMR 1420541]
  2. NIH Director's New Innovator Award [1DP2GM105437-01]
  3. NSF CAREER award [1253035]
  4. Helen Hay Whitney Fellowship
  5. NIH [5RO1NS056114, 5R01GM115634]
  6. NCI Cancer Center Support grant (at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital) [P30CA21765]
  7. ALSAC
  8. NSF [MCB 1121867]

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The nucleolus and other ribonucleoprotein (RNP) bodies are membrane-less organelles that appear to assemble through phase separation of their molecular components. However, many such RNP bodies contain internal subcompartments, and the mechanism of their formation remains unclear. Here, we combine in vivo and in vitro studies, together with computational modeling, to show that subcompartments within the nucleolus represent distinct, coexisting liquid phases. Consistent with their in vivo immiscibility, purified nucleolar proteins phase separate into droplets containing distinct non-coalescing phases that are remarkably similar to nucleoli in vivo. This layered droplet organization is caused by differences in the biophysical properties of the phases-particularly droplet surface tension-which arises from sequence-encoded features of their macromolecular components. These results suggest that phase separation can give rise to multilayered liquids that may facilitate sequential RNA processing reactions in a variety of RNP bodies.

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