4.8 Article

The material properties of a bacterial-derived biomolecular condensate tune biological function in natural and synthetic systems

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-33221-z

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资金

  1. EMBO Long Term Fellowship
  2. NIH [R35NS097263, R01AG064690, 5T32GM7240-40, R35GM118290]
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the National Institutes of Health [R35-GM118071]
  4. NIH Director's New Innovator Award [1DP2GM123494-01]
  5. NIH/NIGMS [R35 GM130375]
  6. Belgian American Educational Foundation
  7. UC San Diego [DBI 192037]
  8. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1542148]
  9. NSF DBI grant [2213983]

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Intracellular phase separation is a universal principle for organizing biochemical reactions. The material properties of condensates formed by the protein PopZ in Caulobacter crescentus are determined by a balance between attractive and repulsive forces. Disrupting this balance results in condensates with different material properties. Condensates with specific material properties are important for proper cell division and organismal fitness.
Intracellular phase separation is emerging as a universal principle for organizing biochemical reactions in time and space. It remains incompletely resolved how biological function is encoded in these assemblies and whether this depends on their material state. The conserved intrinsically disordered protein PopZ forms condensates at the poles of the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus, which in turn orchestrate cell-cycle regulating signaling cascades. Here we show that the material properties of these condensates are determined by a balance between attractive and repulsive forces mediated by a helical oligomerization domain and an expanded disordered region, respectively. A series of PopZ mutants disrupting this balance results in condensates that span the material properties spectrum, from liquid to solid. A narrow range of condensate material properties supports proper cell division, linking emergent properties to organismal fitness. We use these insights to repurpose PopZ as a modular platform for generating tunable synthetic condensates in human cells.

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