Rapid and reversible dissolution of biomolecular condensates using light-controlled recruitment of a solubility tag

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Abstract

Biomolecular condensates are broadly implicated in both normal cellular regulation and disease. Consequently, several chemical biology and optogenetic approaches have been developed to induce phase separation of a protein of interest. However, few tools are available to perform the converse function – dissolving a condensate of interest on demand. Such a tool would aid in testing whether the condensate plays specific functional roles. Here we show that light-gated recruitment of a solubilizing domain, maltose-binding protein (MBP), results in rapid and controlled dissolution of condensates formed from proteins of interest. Our optogenetic MBP-based dissolution strategy (OptoMBP) is rapid, reversible, and can be spatially controlled with subcellular precision. We also provide a proof-of-principle application of OptoMBP by disrupting condensation of the oncogenic fusion protein FUS-CHOP and reverting FUS-CHOP driven transcriptional changes. We envision that the OptoMBP system could be broadly useful for disrupting constitutive protein condensates to probe their biological functions.

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Brumbaugh-Reed, E. H., Gao, Y., Aoki, K., & Toettcher, J. E. (2024). Rapid and reversible dissolution of biomolecular condensates using light-controlled recruitment of a solubility tag. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50858-0

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