Liquid condensate is a common state of proteins and polypeptides at the regime of high intermolecular interactions

Poudyal, Manisha ; Patel, Komal ; Sawner, Ajay Singh ; Gadhe, Laxmikant ; Kadu, Pradeep ; Datta, Debalina ; Mukherjee, Semanti ; Ray, Soumik ; Navalkar, Ambuja ; Maiti, Siddhartha ; Chatterjee, Debdeep ; Bera, Riya ; Gahlot, Nitisha ; Padinhateeri, Ranjith ; Maji, Samir K. (2022) Liquid condensate is a common state of proteins and polypeptides at the regime of high intermolecular interactions Biophysics of Structure and Mechanism . ISSN 0340-1057

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1101/2021.12.31.474648

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2021.12.31.474648

Abstract

Liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) has emerged as a crucial biological mechanism for sequestering macromolecules (such as proteins and nucleic acids) into membraneless organelles in cells. Unstructured and intrinsically disordered domains are known to facilitate multivalent interactions driving protein LLPS. We hypothesized that LLPS could be an intrinsic property of proteins/polypeptides at their high intermolecular interaction regime. To examine this, we studied many (a total of 23) proteins/polypeptides with different structures and sequences for LLPS study using molecular crowder polyethylene glycol (PEG-8000). We showed that all proteins and even highly charged polypeptides (under study) can undergo liquid condensate formation, however with different phase space and conditions. Using a single component and combinations of protein multicomponent (co-LLPS) systems, we establish that a variety of intermolecular interactions can drive proteins/polypeptides LLPS.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Springer
ID Code:127669
Deposited On:31 Oct 2022 04:30
Last Modified:14 Nov 2022 06:26

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