New NMR approach for studying droplet-shaped cell content
Organelles do not have fixed locations in cells
Researchers in Utrecht have found a new way to observe membraneless compartments at an unprecedented level of resolution. The existence of these so called biomolecular condensates in the cell contradicts every textbook on the subject. This is the first time that they have been observed in the test tube with a high degree of precision. The researchers and their colleagues in Germany will publish their findings in Nature Communications on 4 October 2019.
Secondary school students still learn that cells hold organelles that are surrounded by a membrane, but their biology textbooks are now obsolete. For the past few years, scientists have known that in addition to the membrane-covered organelles, like mitochondria and the Golgi complex, there are also membraneless compartments within the cell, called biomolecular condensates.
鈥淭hese 鈥榙roplets鈥 consist of proteins and RNA, and are distributed throughout the cell. The condensates occasionally form islands: the concentration of certain proteins suddenly increases, creating clusters of molecules. That happens all over the cell, in the cytoplasm, but also in the nucleus鈥, explains last author Marc Baldus from Utrecht 木瓜福利影视. 鈥淚t鈥檚 completely different from what鈥檚 in the textbooks. Not everything has a fixed position, like we鈥檇 always thought; even DNA can form these droplets.鈥
Droplets
Scientists have known about these membraneless compartments for a few years now, but the resolution of a normal microscope, tomography, and MRI has not been sufficient to visualise the dynamic nature of these droplets at the atomic level. Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 has advanced equipment to use magnetic resonance (NMR) to observe complex systems. In this study, the researchers worked with the group led by Remco Sprangers at the 木瓜福利影视 of Regensburg to develop a new NMR approach to study proteins that form droplets: a combination of 鈥榮olid-state鈥 and 鈥榮olution state鈥 NMR.
鈥淎 large proportion of the proteins don鈥檛 have a fixed structure; they shift from one form to another. The unfolded parts of the protein can rapidly move, and are available to interact with other proteins. We can now follow these processes at high resolution; where the protein binds, to which other protein it binds, and we will eventually be able to see how fast it happens as well鈥, says Baldus.
Now we鈥檒l start working on identifying all of the details in these systems
Biomolecular condensates often contain proteins that play a role in diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and ALS. 鈥淔or this reason, the pharmaceutical industry is now interested in them as well: more knowledge about their structure might make it possible to administer medications more accurately鈥, Baldus explains. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 step two. For the first time, we鈥檝e proven that we can study these droplets at the highest resolution, and now we鈥檒l start working on identifying all of the details in these systems.鈥
Publication
Atomic-level insight into mRNA processing bodies by combining solid and solution-state NMR spectroscopy. Nature Communications, 4 October 2019. DOI 10.1038/s41467-019-12402-3 Reinier Damman*, Stefan Sch眉tz, Yanzhang Luo*, Markus Weingarth*, Remco Sprangers & Marc Baldus*
*Authors affiliated with Utrecht 木瓜福利影视.