4.7 Article

Simulation of FUS Protein Condensates with an Adapted Coarse-Grained Model

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 525-537

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.0c01064

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [CRC 902]
  2. Human Frontier Science Program [RGP0026/2017]
  3. Max Planck Society

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In this study, researchers developed a strategy to fine-tune the potential energy function for molecular dynamics simulations of biopolymer phase separation. By rebalancing protein-protein interactions against solvation and entropic contributions, they were able to simulate the liquid droplet formation of FUS low-complexity domain (LCD) with a rebalanced MARTINI model. The simulations successfully captured the phase separation of FUS-LCD droplets and provided insights into their physicochemical properties and dynamics.
Disordered proteins and nucleic acids can condense into droplets that resemble the membraneless organelles observed in living cells. MD simulations offer a unique tool to characterize the molecular interactions governing the formation of these biomolecular condensates, their physicochemical properties, and the factors controlling their composition and size. However, biopolymer condensation depends sensitively on the balance between different energetic and entropic contributions. Here, we develop a general strategy to fine-tune the potential energy function for molecular dynamics simulations of biopolymer phase separation. We rebalance protein-protein interactions against solvation and entropic contributions to match the excess free energy of transferring proteins between dilute solution and condensate. We illustrate this formalism by simulating liquid droplet formation of the FUS low-complexity domain (LCD) with a rebalanced MARTINI model. By scaling the strength of the nonbonded interactions in the coarse-grained MARTINI potential energy function, we map out a phase diagram in the plane of protein concentration and interaction strength. Above a critical scaling factor of alpha(c) approximate to 0.6, FUS-LCD condensation is observed, where alpha = 1 and 0 correspond to full and repulsive interactions in the MARTINI model. For a scaling factor alpha = 0.65, we recover experimental densities of the dilute and dense phases, and thus the excess protein transfer free energy into the droplet and the saturation concentration where FUS-LCD condenses. In the region of phase separation, we simulate FUS-LCD droplets of four different sizes in stable equilibrium with the dilute phase and slabs of condensed FUS-LCD for tens of microseconds, and over one millisecond in aggregate. We determine surface tensions in the range of 0.01-0.4 mN/m from the fluctuations of the droplet shape and from the capillary-wave-like broadening of the interface between the two phases. From the dynamics of the protein end-to-end distance, we estimate shear viscosities from 0.001 to 0.02 Pa s for the FUS-LCD droplets with scaling factors alpha in the range of 0.625-0.75, where we observe liquid droplets. Significant hydration of the interior of the droplets keeps the proteins mobile and the droplets fluid.

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