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Multivalent proteins rapidly and reversibly phase-separate upon osmotic cell volume change

Authors :
Marcin Cieslik
Arul M. Chinnaiyan
Nils G. Walter
Karan Bedi
Mats Ljungman
Pushpinder Bawa
Sethuramasundaram Pitchiaya
Ameya P. Jalihal
Abhijit Parolia
Xia Jiang
Lanbo Xiao
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

SUMMARYProcessing bodies (PBs) and stress granules (SGs) are prominent examples of sub-cellular, membrane-less compartments that are observed under physiological and stress conditions, respectively. We observe that the trimeric PB protein DCP1A rapidly (within ∼10 s) phase-separates in mammalian cells during hyperosmotic stress and dissolves upon isosmotic rescue (over ∼100 s) with minimal impact on cell viability even after multiple cycles of osmotic perturbation. Strikingly, this rapid intracellular hyperosmotic phase separation (HOPS) correlates with the degree of cell volume compression, distinct from SG assembly, and is exhibited broadly by homo-multimeric (valency ≥ 2) proteins across several cell types. Notably, HOPS sequesters pre-mRNA cleavage factor components from actively transcribing genomic loci, providing a mechanism for hyperosmolarity-induced global impairment of transcription termination. Together, our data suggest that the multimeric proteome rapidly responds to changes in hydration and molecular crowding, revealing an unexpected mode of globally programmed phase separation and sequestration that adapts the cell to volume change.GRAPHICAL ABSTRACTIN BRIEFCells constantly experience osmotic variation. These external changes lead to changes in cell volume, and consequently the internal state of molecular crowding. Here, Jalihal and Pitchiaya et al. show that multimeric proteins respond rapidly to such cellular changes by undergoing rapid and reversible phase separation.HIGHLIGHTSDCP1A undergoes rapid and reversible hyperosmotic phase separation (HOPS)HOPS of DCP1A depends on its trimerization domainSelf-interacting multivalent proteins (valency ≥ 2) undergo HOPSHOPS of CPSF6 explains transcription termination defects during osmotic stress

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a47c3eda4b2fd48cdde40d2a34993669
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/748293