Structural and hydrodynamic properties of an intrinsically disordered region of a germ cell-specific protein on phase separation.
Jacob P BradyPatrick J FarberAshok SekharYi-Hsuan LinRui HuangAlaji BahTimothy J NottHue Sun ChanAndrew J BaldwinJulie D Forman-KayLewis E KayPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2017)
Membrane encapsulation is frequently used by the cell to sequester biomolecules and compartmentalize their function. Cells also concentrate molecules into phase-separated protein or protein/nucleic acid "membraneless organelles" that regulate a host of biochemical processes. Here, we use solution NMR spectroscopy to study phase-separated droplets formed from the intrinsically disordered N-terminal 236 residues of the germ-granule protein Ddx4. We show that the protein within the concentrated phase of phase-separated Ddx4, [Formula: see text], diffuses as a particle of 600-nm hydrodynamic radius dissolved in water. However, NMR spectra reveal sharp resonances with chemical shifts showing [Formula: see text] to be intrinsically disordered. Spin relaxation measurements indicate that the backbone amides of [Formula: see text] have significant mobility, explaining why high-resolution spectra are observed, but motion is reduced compared with an equivalently concentrated nonphase-separating control. Observation of a network of interchain interactions, as established by NOE spectroscopy, shows the importance of Phe and Arg interactions in driving the phase separation of Ddx4, while the salt dependence of both low- and high-concentration regions of phase diagrams establishes an important role for electrostatic interactions. The diffusion of a series of small probes and the compact but disordered 4E binding protein 2 (4E-BP2) protein in [Formula: see text] are explained by an excluded volume effect, similar to that found for globular protein solvents. No changes in structural propensities of 4E-BP2 dissolved in [Formula: see text] are observed, while changes to DNA and RNA molecules have been reported, highlighting the diverse roles that proteinaceous solvents play in dictating the properties of dissolved solutes.
Keyphrases
- binding protein
- high resolution
- protein protein
- amino acid
- smoking cessation
- human milk
- small molecule
- stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance
- photodynamic therapy
- genome wide
- oxidative stress
- density functional theory
- single cell
- signaling pathway
- molecular dynamics simulations
- cell death
- organic matter
- molecular dynamics
- fluorescence imaging
- tandem mass spectrometry