Dissecting Molecular Events of Phase Separation of Fused in Sarcoma Using Single-Molecule FRET, HomoFRET, and Vibrational Raman Spectroscopy.
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Phase separation of biomolecules into liquid-like supramolecular assemblies has emerged as a
critical organizing principle within living cells. Intrinsically disordered proteins/regions
(IDPs/IDRs) comprising low-complexity (LC) and prion-like domains have been identified as
the key candidates driving intracellular phase separation leading to the formation of
noncanonical membrane-less organelles, also known as biomolecular condensates. These
condensates are thought to spatiotemporal regulate critical cellular functions and are also
known to undergo aberrant phase transitions associated with a range of neurodegenerative
diseases. My thesis work illuminates the inner workings of an archetypical phase-separating
protein, Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) using an amalgamation of single-droplet single-molecule
FRET (Förster resonance energy transfer), picosecond time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy,
fluorescence
correlation
spectroscopy
in
conjunction
with
vibrational
Raman
spectroscopy. For single-molecule FRET experiments, we chose the prion-like low-
complexity domain of FUS (FUS-LC) which is the crucial driver of FUS condensate
formation. Our results revealed the conformational distribution and dynamics within the
monomeric and condensed phases at a single-molecule resolution in a droplet-by-droplet
manner and demonstrated that the conformational unzipping is the key event that allows
polypeptide chains to assemble via multivalent noncovalent interactions resulting in the
formation of biomolecular condensates. A disease-associated mutation further facilitated chain
expansion of the FUS-LC polypeptide chain, causing enhanced protein-protein interactions and
an increase in dense phase concentration, leading to an increased aggregation propensity. We
also demonstrated the power of vibration Raman spectroscopy to delineate the structural
changes in the hydration water layer within protein liquid droplets. Our single-droplet
vibrational Raman spectroscopy measurements highlighted a sequence-encoded reorganizationof the hydrogen bonding network of water molecules upon phase separation. Our study
deciphered the internal restructuring of the solvent hydrogen bonding network distinctly within
the condensates and the dispersed phase in a sequence-dependent manner. Finally, we
demonstrated the application of homoFRET to study energy migration within the condensed
phase of FUS both in vitro and in situ. Both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence
anisotropy measurements reported the extent of homoFRET that is used as a robust readout for
the internal molecular packing within dynamic biomolecular condensates. This methodology
allowed us to directly monitor the effect of modulators of phase behavior such as RNA and
ATP, as well as the impact of post-translational modifications in protein phase
separation. Using this methodology, we also used mammalian cell lines to study nuclear FUS
and oxidative stress-induced stress granule formation in the cytoplasm. In summary, novel
tools and concepts that are developed and utilized during my thesis work can have a wide range
of applications in studying biological phase transitions involved in physiology and disease.