4.8 Article

Composition-dependent thermodynamics of intracellular phase separation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 581, Issue 7807, Pages 209-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2256-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) 4D Nucleome Program [U01 DA040601]
  3. Princeton Center for Complex Materials, a Materials Research Science and Engineering Center
  4. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DMR 1420541]
  5. NSF [DGE-1656466]
  6. NIH [R01 GM115634, R35 GM131891, P30 CA021765, F32 GM131524]
  7. ALSAC
  8. St Jude Children's Research Hospital
  9. National Cancer Institute [P30 CA021765]

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Intracellular bodies such as nucleoli, Cajal bodies and various signalling assemblies represent membraneless organelles, or condensates, that form via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS)(1,2). Biomolecular interactions-particularly homotypic interactions mediated by self-associating intrinsically disordered protein regionsare thought to underlie the thermodynamic driving forces for LLPS, forming condensates that can facilitate the assembly and processing of biochemically active complexes, such as ribosomal subunits within the nucleolus. Simplified model systems(3-6) have led to the concept that a single fixed saturation concentration is a defining feature of endogenous LLPS7-9, and has been suggested as a mechanism for intracellular concentration buffering(2,7,8,10). However, the assumption of a fixed saturation concentration remains largely untested within living cells, in which the richly multicomponent nature of condensates could complicate this simple picture. Here we show that heterotypic multicomponent interactions dominate endogenous LLPS, and give rise to nucleoli and other condensates that do not exhibit a fixed saturation concentration. As the concentration of individual components is varied, their partition coefficients change in a manner that can be used to determine the thermodynamic free energies that underlie LLPS. We find that heterotypic interactions among protein and RNA components stabilize various archetypal intracellular condensates-including the nucleolus, Cajal bodies, stress granules and P-bodies-implying that the composition of condensates is finely tuned by the thermodynamics of the underlying biomolecular interaction network. In the context of RNA-processing condensates such as the nucleolus, this manifests in the selective exclusion of fully assembled ribonucleoprotein complexes, providing a thermodynamic basis for vectorial ribosomal RNA flux out of the nucleolus. This methodology is conceptually straightforward and readily implemented, and can be broadly used to extract thermodynamic parameters from microscopy images. These approaches pave the way for a deeper understanding of the thermodynamics of multicomponent intracellular phase behaviour and its interplay with the nonequilibrium activity that is characteristic of endogenous condensates.

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