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Home arrow Publications arrow Research Articles arrow Phase transition of a nuage protein generates responsive membraneless organelles
Phase transition of a nuage protein generates responsive membraneless organelles Print E-mail
Written by Karen Colwill   
Thursday, 05 March 2015

Phase transition of a disordered nuage protein generates environmentally responsive membraneless organelles.

Nott TJ, Petsalaki E, Farber P, Jervis D, Fussner E, Plochowietz A, Craggs TD, Bazett-Jones DP, Pawson T, Forman-Kay JD, Baldwin AJ. 

Mol Cell. 2015 Mar 5;57(5):936-47.

PMID:25747659  

doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2015.01.013 

Cells chemically isolate molecules in compartments to both facilitate and regulate their interactions. In addition to membrane-encapsulated compartments, cells can form proteinaceous and membraneless organelles, including nucleoli, Cajal and PML bodies, and stress granules. The principles that determine when and why these structures form have remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that the disordered tails of Ddx4, a primary constituent of nuage or germ granules, form phase-separated organelles both in live cells and in vitro. These bodies are stabilized by patterned electrostatic interactions that are highly sensitive to temperature, ionic strength, arginine methylation, and splicing. Sequence determinants are used to identify proteins found in both membraneless organelles and cell adhesion. Moreover, the bodies provide an alternative solvent environment that can concentrate single-stranded DNA but largely exclude double-stranded DNA. We propose that phase separation of disordered proteins containing weakly interacting blocks is a general mechanism for forming regulated, membraneless organelles.

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 09 April 2015 )
 
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