37 research outputs found

    Natural Selection on the Phase-Separation Properties of FUS during 160 My of Mammalian Evolution

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    Protein phase separation can help explain the formation of many nonmembranous organelles. However, we know little about its ability to change in evolution. Here we studied the evolution of the mammalian RNA-binding protein Fused in Sarcoma (FUS), a protein whose prion-like domain (PLD) contributes to the formation of stress granules through liquid–liquid phase separation. Although the PLD evolves three times as rapidly as the remainder of FUS, it harbors absolutely conserved tyrosine residues that are crucial for phase separation. Ancestral reconstruction shows that the phosphorylation sites within the PLD are subject to stabilizing selection. They toggle among a small number of amino acid states. One exception to this pattern is primates, where the number of such phosphosites has increased through positive selection. In addition, we find frequent glutamine to proline changes that help maintain the unstructured state of FUS that is necessary for phase separation. Our work provides evidence that natural selection has stabilized the liquid forming potential of FUS and minimized the propensity of cytotoxic liquid-to-solid phase transitions during 160 My of mammalian evolution

    Unfolding Simulations of Holomyoglobin from Four Mammals: Identification of Intermediates and β-Sheet Formation from Partially Unfolded States

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    Myoglobin (Mb) is a centrally important, widely studied mammalian protein. While much work has investigated multi-step unfolding of apoMb using acid or denaturant, holomyoglobin unfolding is poorly understood despite its biological relevance. We present here the first systematic unfolding simulations of holoMb and the first comparative study of unfolding of protein orthologs from different species (sperm whale, pig, horse, and harbor seal). We also provide new interpretations of experimental mean molecular ellipticities of myoglobin intermediates, notably correcting for random coil and number of helices in intermediates. The simulated holoproteins at 310 K displayed structures and dynamics in agreement with crystal structures (R g ~1.48-1.51 nm, helicity ~75%). At 400 K, heme was not lost, but some helix loss was observed in pig and horse, suggesting that these helices are less stable in terrestrial species. At 500 K, heme was lost within 1.0-3.7 ns. All four proteins displayed exponentially decaying helix structure within 20 ns. The C- and F-helices were lost quickly in all cases. Heme delayed helix loss, and sperm whale myoglobin exhibited highest retention of heme and D/E helices. Persistence of conformation (RMSD), secondary structure, and ellipticity between 2-11 ns was interpreted as intermediates of holoMb unfolding in all four species. The intermediates resemble those of apoMb notably in A and H helices, but differ substantially in the D-, E- and F-helices, which interact with heme. The identified mechanisms cast light on the role of metal/cofactor in poorly understood holoMb unfolding. We also observed β-sheet formation of several myoglobins at 500 K as seen experimentally, occurring after disruption of helices to a partially unfolded, globally disordered state; heme reduced this tendency and sperm-whale did not display any sheet propensity during the simulations

    Yeast Proteins may Reversibly Aggregate like Amphiphilic Molecules

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    More than a hundred proteins in yeast reversibly aggregate and phase-separate in response to various stressors, such as nutrient depletion and heat shock. We know little about the protein sequence and structural features behind this ability, which has not been characterized on a proteome-wide level. To identify the distinctive features of aggregation-prone protein regions, we apply machine learning algorithms to genome-scale limited proteolysis-mass spectrometry (LiP-MS) data from yeast proteins. LiP-MS data reveals that 96 proteins show significant structural changes upon heat shock. We find that in these proteins the propensity to phase separate cannot be solely driven by disordered regions, because their aggregation-prone regions (APRs) are not significantly disordered. Instead, the phase separation of these proteins requires contributions from both disordered and structured regions. APRs are significantly enriched in aliphatic residues and depleted in positively charged amino acids. Aggregator proteins with longer APRs show a greater propensity to aggregate, a relationship that can be explained by equilibrium statistical thermodynamics. Altogether, our observations suggest that proteome-wide reversible protein aggregation is mediated by sequence-encoded properties. We propose that aggregating proteins resemble supra-molecular amphiphiles, where APRs are the hydrophobic parts, and non-APRs are the hydrophilic parts
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