Protein conformation and biomolecular condensates

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crstbi.2022.09.004Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Condensates, the crossroad of cellular compartmentalization and protein conformation.

  • Compartmentalization by biomolecular condensation is behind most cellular processes.

  • Biomolecular condensation is driven by multivalent intermolecular interactions.

  • Biomolecular condensation is mediated by order-disorder conformational transitions.

  • Biomolecular condensation and conformational transitions are encoded in sequence.

Abstract

Protein conformation and cell compartmentalization are fundamental concepts and subjects of vast scientific endeavors. In the last two decades, we have witnessed exciting advances that unveiled the conjunction of these concepts. An avalanche of studies highlighted the central role of biomolecular condensates in membraneless subcellular compartmentalization that permits the spatiotemporal organization and regulation of myriads of simultaneous biochemical reactions and macromolecular interactions. These studies have also shown that biomolecular condensation, driven by multivalent intermolecular interactions, is mediated by order-disorder transitions of protein conformation and by protein domain architecture. Conceptually, protein condensation is a distinct level in protein conformational landscape in which collective folding of large collections of molecules takes place. Biomolecular condensates arise by the physical process of phase separation and comprise a variety of bodies ranging from membraneless organelles to liquid condensates to solid-like conglomerates, spanning lengths from mesoscopic clusters (nanometers) to micrometer-sized objects. In this review, we summarize and discuss recent work on the assembly, composition, conformation, material properties, thermodynamics, regulation, and functions of these bodies. We also review the conceptual framework for future studies on the conformational dynamics of condensed proteins in the regulation of cellular processes.

Keywords

Phase separation
Intrinsically disordered proteins
Protein condensates
Protein conformation
Protein folding
Membraneless organelles
Mesoscopic clusters
Nanocondensates
Protein coacervates
Protein colloids

Data availability

Data will be made available on request.

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