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A globular protein exhibits rare phase behavior and forms chemically regulated orthogonal condensates in cells
Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.15030
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2025-12-01
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Hu, Zhijuan
Chen, Anyang
Yang, Peiguo
TORE-DOI
Journal
Volume
16
Issue
1
Article Number
2449
Citation
Nature Communications 16 (1): 2449 (2025)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
Nature Research
Proteins with chemically regulatable phase separation are of great interest in the fields of biomolecular condensates and synthetic biology. Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are the dominating building blocks of biomolecular condensates which often lack orthogonality and small-molecule regulation desired to create synthetic biomolecular condensates or membraneless organelles (MLOs). Here, we discover a well-folded globular protein, lipoate-protein ligase A (LplA) from E. coli involved in lipoylation of enzymes essential for one-carbon and energy metabolisms, that exhibits structural homomeric oligomerization and a rare LCST-type reversible phase separation in vitro. In both E. coli and human U2OS cells, LplA can form orthogonal condensates, which can be specifically dissolved by its natural substrate, the small molecule lipoic acid and its analogue lipoamide. The study of LplA phase behavior and its regulatability expands our understanding and toolkit of small-molecule regulatable protein phase behavior with impacts on biomedicine and synthetic biology.
DDC Class
572: Biochemistry
Publication version
publishedVersion
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Name
s41467-025-57886-4.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
4.64 MB
Format
Adobe PDF