iScience (Apr 2022)

RNA chain length and stoichiometry govern surface tension and stability of protein-RNA condensates

  • Rabia Laghmach,
  • Ibraheem Alshareedah,
  • Matthew Pham,
  • Muralikrishna Raju,
  • Priya R. Banerjee,
  • Davit A. Potoyan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 4
p. 104105

Abstract

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Summary: Proteomic studies have shown that cellular condensates are frequently enriched in diverse RNA molecules, which is suggestive of mechanistic links between phase separation and transcriptional activities. Here, we report a systematic experimental and computational study of thermodynamic landscapes and interfacial properties of protein-RNA condensates. We have studied the affinity of protein-RNA condensation as a function of variable RNA sequence length and RNA-protein stoichiometry under different ionic environments and external crowding. We have chosen the PolyU sequences for RNA and arginine/glycine-rich intrinsically disordered peptide (RGG) for proteins as a model system of RNA-protein condensates, which we then investigate through in vitro microscopy measurements and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations. We find that crowding and RNA chain length can have a major stabilizing effect on the condensation. We also find that the RNA-protein charge ratio is a crucial variable controlling stability, interfacial properties, and the reentrant phase behavior of RGG-RNA mixtures.

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