4.8 Article

Liquid network connectivity regulates the stability and composition of biomolecular condensates with many components

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1917569117

Keywords

liquid-liquid phase separation; membraneless organelles; biomolecular condensates; cell compartmentalization

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [803326]
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) studentship [EP/N509620/1]
  3. Oppenheimer Fellowship
  4. Emmanuel College Roger Ekins Research Fellowship
  5. EPSRC Tier-2 Capital Grant [EP/P020259/1]
  6. EPSRC [EP/P020259/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

One of the key mechanisms used by cells to control the spatiotemporal organization of their many components is the formation and dissolution of biomolecular condensates through liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS). Using a minimal coarse-grained model that allows us to simulate thousands of interacting multivalent proteins, we investigate the physical parameters dictating the stability and composition of multicomponent biomolecular condensates. We demonstrate that the molecular connectivity of the condensed-liquid network-i.e., the number of weak attractive protein-protein interactions per unit of volume-determines the stability (e.g., in temperature, pH, salt concentration) of multicomponent condensates, where stability is positively correlated with connectivity. While the connectivity of scaffolds (biomolecules essential for LLPS) dominates the phase landscape, introduction of clients (species recruited via scaffold-client interactions) fine-tunes it by transforming the scaffold-scaffold bond network. Whereas low-valency clients that compete for scaffoldscaffold binding sites decrease connectivity and stability, those that bind to alternate scaffold sites not required for LLPS or that have higher-than-scaffold valencies form additional scaffoldclient-scaffold bridges increasing stability. Proteins that establish more connections (via increased valencies, promiscuous binding, and topologies that enable multivalent interactions) support the stability of and are enriched within multicomponent condensates. Importantly, proteins that increase the connectivity of multicomponent condensates have higher critical points as pure systems or, if pure LLPS is unfeasible, as binary scaffold-client mixtures. Hence, critical points of accessible systems (i.e., with just a few components) might serve as a unified thermodynamic parameter to predict the composition of multicomponent condensates.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available