4.8 Article

Cells recognize osmotic stress through liquid-liquid phase separation lubricated with poly(ADP-ribose)

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21614-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) under the Project for Elucidating and Controlling Mechanisms of Aging and Longevity [JP20gm5010001]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) (KAKENHI) [JP18H03995, JP18H02569, JP19K16067]
  3. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) Moonshot R&D-MILLENNIA Program [JPMJMS2022-18]

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This study reveals that macromolecular crowding induces liquid-demixing condensates of ASK3 under hyperosmotic stress, leading to its inactivation, while a factor related to poly(ADP-ribose) signaling is identified as an ASK3 inactivation regulator. These findings demonstrate that cells rationally incorporate physicochemical phase separation into their osmosensing systems.
Cells are under threat of osmotic perturbation; cell volume maintenance is critical in cerebral edema, inflammation and aging, in which prominent changes in intracellular or extracellular osmolality emerge. After osmotic stress-enforced cell swelling or shrinkage, the cells regulate intracellular osmolality to recover their volume. However, the mechanisms recognizing osmotic stress remain obscured. We previously clarified that apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 3 (ASK3) bidirectionally responds to osmotic stress and regulates cell volume recovery. Here, we show that macromolecular crowding induces liquid-demixing condensates of ASK3 under hyperosmotic stress, which transduce osmosensing signal into ASK3 inactivation. A genome-wide small interfering RNA (siRNA) screen identifies an ASK3 inactivation regulator, nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT), related to poly(ADP-ribose) signaling. Furthermore, we clarify that poly(ADP-ribose) keeps ASK3 condensates in the liquid phase and enables ASK3 to become inactivated under hyperosmotic stress. Our findings demonstrate that cells rationally incorporate physicochemical phase separation into their osmosensing systems.

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