Indissoluble biomolecular condensates via elasticity

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Abstract

While biomolecular condensates are often liquidlike, many experiments found that condensates also exhibit solidlike behaviors, making them indissoluble in conditions liquid condensates dissolve. Despite the biological significance of indissoluble condensates to cellular fitness, the mechanisms underlying the indissolubility of solidlike condensates are still unclear. In this work, we study the effects of elasticity on the dissolution of biomolecular condensates. We demonstrate that the bulk stress inside condensates may prevent the condensates from dissolution and obtain a mechanical equilibrium condition of elastic condensates. Moreover, we predict a phase diagram of indissolubility for biomolecular condensates and identify a minimum bulk modulus for the condensates to be indissoluble. To verify our theories, we simulate the two-fluid model in which the slow component corresponding to biomolecules generates elastic stress. Our theoretical predictions are nicely confirmed and independent of microscopic details. Our works show that elasticity makes biomolecular condensates less prone to dissolution.

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APA

Meng, L., & Lin, J. (2023). Indissoluble biomolecular condensates via elasticity. Physical Review Research, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.5.L012024

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