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Poly(A)-binding protein is an ataxin-2 chaperone that regulates biomolecular condensates

Authors :
National Science Foundation (US)
Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas
EMBO
Carnegie Institution for Science
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
European Commission
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Boeynaems, Steven
Dorone, Yanniv
Zhuang, Yanrong
Shabardina, Victoria
Huang, Guozhong
Marian, Anca
Kim, Garam
Sanyal, Anushka
Şen, Nesli-Ece
Griffith, Daniel
Docampo, Roberto
Lasker, Keren
Ruiz-Trillo, Iñaki
Auburger, Georg
Holehouse, Alex S.
Kabashi, Edor
Lin, Yi
Gitler, Aaron D.
National Science Foundation (US)
Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas
EMBO
Carnegie Institution for Science
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
European Commission
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Boeynaems, Steven
Dorone, Yanniv
Zhuang, Yanrong
Shabardina, Victoria
Huang, Guozhong
Marian, Anca
Kim, Garam
Sanyal, Anushka
Şen, Nesli-Ece
Griffith, Daniel
Docampo, Roberto
Lasker, Keren
Ruiz-Trillo, Iñaki
Auburger, Georg
Holehouse, Alex S.
Kabashi, Edor
Lin, Yi
Gitler, Aaron D.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Biomolecular condensation underlies the biogenesis of an expanding array of membraneless assemblies, including stress granules (SGs), which form under a variety of cellular stresses. Advances have been made in understanding the molecular grammar of a few scaffold proteins that make up these phases, but how the partitioning of hundreds of SG proteins is regulated remains largely unresolved. While investigating the rules that govern the condensation of ataxin-2, an SG protein implicated in neurodegenerative disease, we unexpectedly identified a short 14 aa sequence that acts as a condensation switch and is conserved across the eukaryote lineage. We identify poly(A)-binding proteins as unconventional RNA-dependent chaperones that control this regulatory switch. Our results uncover a hierarchy of cis and trans interactions that fine-tune ataxin-2 condensation and reveal an unexpected molecular function for ancient poly(A)-binding proteins as regulators of biomolecular condensate proteins. These findings may inspire approaches to therapeutically target aberrant phases in disease.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1431968421
Document Type :
Electronic Resource