Protein compactness and interaction valency define the architecture of a biomolecular condensate across scales

Author:

Polyansky Anton A12ORCID,Gallego Laura D13,Efremov Roman G4,Köhler Alwin135,Zagrovic Bojan12

Affiliation:

1. Max Perutz Labs, Vienna Biocenter Campus (VBC)

2. University of Vienna, Center for Molecular Biology, Department of Structural and Computational Biology

3. Medical University of Vienna, Center for Medical Biochemistry

4. MM Shemyakin and Yu A Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences

5. University of Vienna, Center for Molecular Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology

Abstract

Non-membrane-bound biomolecular condensates have been proposed to represent an important mode of subcellular organization in diverse biological settings. However, the fundamental principles governing the spatial organization and dynamics of condensates at the atomistic level remain unclear. The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Lge1 protein is required for histone H2B ubiquitination and its N-terminal intrinsically disordered fragment (Lge11-80) undergoes robust phase separation. This study connects single- and multi-chain all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of Lge11-80 with the in vitro behavior of Lge11-80 condensates. Analysis of modeled protein-protein interactions elucidates the key determinants of Lge11-80 condensate formation and links configurational entropy, valency, and compactness of proteins inside the condensates. A newly derived analytical formalism, related to colloid fractal cluster formation, describes condensate architecture across length scales as a function of protein valency and compactness. In particular, the formalism provides an atomistically resolved model of Lge11-80 condensates on the scale of hundreds of nanometers starting from individual protein conformers captured in simulations. The simulation-derived fractal dimensions of condensates of Lge11-80 and its mutants agree with their in vitro morphologies. The presented framework enables a multiscale description of biomolecular condensates and embeds their study in a wider context of colloid self-organization.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

NOMIS Stiftung

Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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