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Reentrant liquid condensate phase of proteins is stabilized by hydrophobic and non-ionic interactions

Authors :
Krainer, Georg
Welsh, Timothy J
Joseph, Jerelle A
Espinosa, Jorge R
Wittmann, Sina
De Csilléry, Ella
Sridhar, Akshay
Toprakcioglu, Zenon
Gudiškytė, Giedre
Czekalska, Magdalena A
Arter, William E
Guillén-Boixet, Jordina
Franzmann, Titus M
Qamar, Seema
George-Hyslop, Peter St
Hyman, Anthony A
Collepardo-Guevara, Rosana
Alberti, Simon
Knowles, Tuomas PJ
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

Liquid-liquid phase separation of proteins underpins the formation of membraneless compartments in living cells. Elucidating the molecular driving forces underlying protein phase transitions is therefore a key objective for understanding biological function and malfunction. Here we show that cellular proteins, which form condensates at low salt concentrations, including FUS, TDP-43, Brd4, Sox2, and Annexin A11, can reenter a phase-separated regime at high salt concentrations. By bringing together experiments and simulations, we demonstrate that this reentrant phase transition in the high-salt regime is driven by hydrophobic and non-ionic interactions, and is mechanistically distinct from the low-salt regime, where condensates are additionally stabilized by electrostatic forces. Our work thus sheds light on the cooperation of hydrophobic and non-ionic interactions as general driving forces in the condensation process, with important implications for aberrant function, druggability, and material properties of biomolecular condensates.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c5af7c1677f6eac2b5241f67d9b407bd