Phosphorylation sites are evolutionary checkpoints against liquid–solid transition in protein condensates

Author:

Ranganathan Srivastav1,Dasmeh Pouria2ORCID,Furniss Seth13ORCID,Shakhnovich Eugene1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138

2. Center for Human Genetics, Marburg University, Marburg 35033, Germany

3. Department of Chemistry, Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QZ, United Kingdom

Abstract

Assemblies of multivalent RNA-binding protein fused in sarcoma (FUS) can exist in the functional liquid-like state as well as less dynamic and potentially toxic amyloid- and hydrogel-like states. How could then cells form liquid-like condensates while avoiding their transformation to amyloids? Here, we show how posttranslational phosphorylation can provide a “handle” that prevents liquid–solid transition of intracellular condensates containing FUS. Using residue-specific coarse-grained simulations, for 85 different mammalian FUS sequences, we show how the number of phosphorylation sites and their spatial arrangement affect intracluster dynamics preventing conversion to amyloids. All atom simulations further confirm that phosphorylation can effectively reduce the β-sheet propensity in amyloid-prone fragments of FUS. A detailed evolutionary analysis shows that mammalian FUS PLDs are enriched in amyloid-prone stretches compared to control neutrally evolved sequences, suggesting that mammalian FUS proteins evolved to self-assemble. However, in stark contrast to proteins that do not phase-separate for their function, mammalian sequences have phosphosites in close proximity to these amyloid-prone regions. These results suggest that evolution uses amyloid-prone sequences in prion-like domains to enhance phase separation of condensate proteins while enriching phosphorylation sites in close proximity to safeguard against liquid–solid transitions.

Funder

NIH NIGMS

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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