4.8 Article

Electric Potential at the Interface of Membraneless Organelles Gauged by Graphene

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 23, Issue 23, Pages 10796-10801

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c02915

Keywords

biomolecular condensates; membranes; graphene; charge transfer; synapse

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In this study, graphene-based sensors were used to investigate the electrostatic properties of synapsin condensates. It was found that synapsin condensates generate strong electrical responses when in contact with graphene, and this electrical response is caused by the formation of an electric double layer between the condensates and graphene.
Eukaryotic cells contain membrane-bound and membrane-less organelles that are often in contact with each other. How the interface properties of membrane-less organelles regulate their interactions with membranes remains challenging to assess. Here, we employ graphene-based sensors to investigate the electrostatic properties of synapsin 1, a major synaptic phosphoprotein, either in a single phase or after undergoing phase separation to form synapsin condensates. Using these graphene-based sensors, we discover that synapsin condensates generate strong electrical responses that are otherwise absent when synapsin is present as a single phase. By introducing atomically thin dielectric barriers, we show that the electrical response originates in an electric double layer whose formation governs the interaction between synapsin condensates and graphene. Our data indicate that the interface properties of the same protein are substantially different when the protein is in a single phase versus within a biomolecular condensate, unraveling that condensates can harbor ion potential differences at their interface.

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