Formation of liquid condensates plays a critical role in biology via localization of different components or via altered hydrodynamic transport, yet the hydrogen-bonding environment within condensates, pivotal for solvation, has remained elusive. We explore the hydrogen-bond dynamics within condensates formed by the low-complexity domain of the fused in sarcoma protein. Probing the hydrogen-bond dynamics sensed by condensate proteins using two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy of the protein amide I vibrations, we find that frequency-frequency correlations of the amide I vibration decay on a picosecond time scale. Interestingly, these dynamics are markedly slower for proteins in the condensate than in a homogeneous protein solution, indicative of different hydration dynamics. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations confirm that lifetimes of hydrogen-bonds between water and the protein are longer in the condensates than in the protein in solution. Altered hydrogen-bonding dynamics may contribute to unique solvation and reaction dynamics in such condensates.
CITATION STYLE
Krevert, C. S., Chavez, D., Chatterjee, S., Stelzl, L. S., Pütz, S., Roeters, S. J., … Hunger, J. (2023). Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation of the Intrinsically Disordered Domain of the Fused in Sarcoma Protein Results in Substantial Slowing of Hydration Dynamics. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 14(49), 11224–11234. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.3c02790
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