Nanoscale profiling of evolving intermolecular interactions in ageing FUS condensates

Author:

Miller Alyssa,Toprakcioglu ZenonORCID,Qamar Seema,St. George-Hyslop PeterORCID,Ruggeri F. SimoneORCID,Knowles Tuomas P. J.ORCID,Vendruscolo MicheleORCID

Abstract

AbstractIn addition to the native state, proteins can form liquid-like condensates, viscoelastic condensates, such as gels, as well as solid-like condensates, such as amyloid fibrils, crystals and amorphous materials. The material properties of these condensates play important roles in their cellular functions, with aberrant liquid-to-solid phase transitions having been implicated in neurodegenerative diseases. However, the molecular changes and resultant material properties across the whole phase space of condensates are complex and yet to be fully understood. The extreme sensitivity to their environment, which enables their biological function, is also what makes protein condensates particularly challenging experimental targets. Here, we provide a characterisation of the ageing behaviour of the full-length fused in sarcoma (FUS) protein. We achieve this goal by using a microfluidic sample deposition technology to enable the application of surface-based techniques to the study of biological condensates. We first demonstrate that we maintain relevant structural features of condensates in physiologically-relevant conditions on surfaces. Then, using a combination of atomic force microscopy and vibrational spectroscopy, we characterise the spatio-temporal changes in the structure and mechanical properties of the condensates to reveal local phase transitions in individual condensates. We observe that initially dynamic, fluid-like condensates undergo a global increase in elastic response conferred by an increase in the density of cation-π intermolecular interactions. Solid-like structures form first at condensate-solvent interfaces, before heterogeneously propagating throughout the aged fluid core. These solid structures are composed of heterogenous, non-amyloid β-sheets, which are stabilised by hydrogen-bonding interactions not observed in the fluid state. Overall, this study identifies the molecular conformations associated with different physical states of FUS condensates, establishing a technology platform to understand the role of phase behaviour in condensate function and dysfunction.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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