Protein Condensation, Cellular Organization, and Spatiotemporal Regulation of Cytoplasmic Properties.
Publication Date
2022-07-07Journal Title
Adv Biol (Weinh)
ISSN
2701-0198
Publisher
Wiley
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
AO
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van Tartwijk, F., & Kaminski, C. (2022). Protein Condensation, Cellular Organization, and Spatiotemporal Regulation of Cytoplasmic Properties.. Adv Biol (Weinh) https://doi.org/10.1002/adbi.202101328
Abstract
The cytoplasm is an aqueous, highly crowded solution of active macromolecules. Its properties influence the behavior of proteins, including their folding, motion, and interactions. In particular, proteins in the cytoplasm can interact to form phase-separated assemblies, so-called biomolecular condensates. The interplay between cytoplasmic properties and protein condensation is critical in a number of functional contexts and is the subject of this review. The authors first describe how cytoplasmic properties can affect protein behavior, in particular condensate formation, and then describe the functional implications of this interplay in three cellular contexts, which exemplify how protein self-organization can be adapted to support certain physiological phenotypes. The authors then describe the formation of RNA-protein condensates in highly polarized cells such as neurons, where condensates play a critical role in the regulation of local protein synthesis, and describe how different stressors trigger extensive reorganization of the cytoplasm, both through signaling pathways and through direct stress-induced changes in cytoplasmic properties. Finally, the authors describe changes in protein behavior and cytoplasmic properties that may occur in extremophiles, in particular organisms that have adapted to inhabit environments of extreme temperature, and discuss the implications and functional importance of these changes.
Keywords
Review, Reviews, biomolecular condensation, cytoplasmic properties, cytoplasmic self‐organization, extremophiles, local protein synthesis, macromolecular crowding, macromolecular interactions, ribonucleoprotein granules, stress responses
Sponsorship
MedImmune, Infinitus (China) Ltd
Funder references
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/H018301/1)
Medical Research Council (MR/K015850/1)
Medical Research Council (MR/K02292X/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/L015889/1)
Wellcome Trust (203249/Z/16/Z)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (1946113)
Wellcome Trust (089703/Z/09/Z)
Identifiers
adbi202101328
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/adbi.202101328
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/338872
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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