Biomolecular condensates in kidney physiology and disease.
Guoming GaoEmily S SumrallSethuramasundaram PitchiayaMarkus BitzerSimon AlbertiNils G WalterPublished in: Nature reviews. Nephrology (2023)
The regulation and preservation of distinct intracellular and extracellular solute microenvironments is crucial for the maintenance of cellular homeostasis. In mammals, the kidneys control bodily salt and water homeostasis. Specifically, the urine-concentrating mechanism within the renal medulla causes fluctuations in extracellular osmolarity, which enables cells of the kidney to either conserve or eliminate water and electrolytes, depending on the balance between intake and loss. However, relatively little is known about the subcellular and molecular changes caused by such osmotic stresses. Advances have shown that many cells, including those of the kidney, rapidly (within seconds) and reversibly (within minutes) assemble membraneless, nano-to-microscale subcellular assemblies termed biomolecular condensates via the biophysical process of hyperosmotic phase separation (HOPS). Mechanistically, osmotic cell compression mediates changes in intracellular hydration, concentration and molecular crowding, rendering HOPS one of many related phase-separation phenomena. Osmotic stress causes numerous homo-multimeric proteins to condense, thereby affecting gene expression and cell survival. HOPS rapidly regulates specific cellular biochemical processes before appropriate protective or corrective action by broader stress response mechanisms can be initiated. Here, we broadly survey emerging evidence for, and the impact of, biomolecular condensates in nephrology, where initial concentration buffering by HOPS and its subsequent cellular escalation mechanisms are expected to have important implications for kidney physiology and disease.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- cell cycle arrest
- dna methylation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- reactive oxygen species
- single cell
- stem cells
- clinical trial
- signaling pathway
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- single molecule
- cell therapy
- cross sectional
- body mass index
- ionic liquid
- open label
- cell proliferation
- mesenchymal stem cells
- stress induced
- bone marrow
- weight loss