A generic approach to study the kinetics of liquid–liquid phase separation under near-native conditions

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Abstract

Understanding the kinetics, thermodynamics, and molecular mechanisms of liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) is of paramount importance in cell biology, requiring reproducible methods for studying often severely aggregation-prone proteins. Frequently applied approaches for inducing LLPS, such as dilution of the protein from an urea-containing solution or cleavage of its fused solubility tag, often lead to very different kinetic behaviors. Here we demonstrate that at carefully selected pH values proteins such as the low-complexity domain of hnRNPA2, TDP-43, and NUP98, or the stress protein ERD14, can be kept in solution and their LLPS can then be induced by a jump to native pH. This approach represents a generic method for studying the full kinetic trajectory of LLPS under near native conditions that can be easily controlled, providing a platform for the characterization of physiologically relevant phase-separation behavior of diverse proteins.

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Van Lindt, J., Bratek-Skicki, A., Nguyen, P. N., Pakravan, D., Durán-Armenta, L. F., Tantos, A., … Tompa, P. (2021). A generic approach to study the kinetics of liquid–liquid phase separation under near-native conditions. Communications Biology, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-01596-8

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