Nucleation of Biomolecular Condensates from Finite-Sized Simulations

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Abstract

The nucleation of protein condensates is a concentration-driven process of assembly. When modeled in the canonical ensemble, condensation is affected by finite-size effects. Here, we present a general and efficient route for obtaining ensemble properties of protein condensates in the macroscopic limit from finite-sized nucleation simulations. The approach is based on a theoretical description of droplet nucleation in the canonical ensemble and enables estimation of thermodynamic and kinetic parameters, such as the macroscopic equilibrium density of the dilute protein phase, the surface tension of the condensates, and nucleation free energy barriers. We apply the method to coarse-grained simulations of NDDX4 and FUS-LC, two phase-separating disordered proteins with different physicochemical characteristics. Our results show that NDDX4 condensate droplets, characterized by lower surface tension, higher solubility, and faster monomer exchange dynamics compared to those of FUS-LC, form with negligible nucleation barriers. In contrast, FUS-LC condensates form via an activated process over a wide range of concentrations.

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APA

Li, L., Paloni, M., Finney, A. R., Barducci, A., & Salvalaglio, M. (2023). Nucleation of Biomolecular Condensates from Finite-Sized Simulations. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 14(7), 1748–1755. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.2c03512

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