| Literature DB >> 29115293 |
Hideki Nakamura1,2, Albert A Lee1,2, Ali Sobhi Afshar3, Shigeki Watanabe1, Elmer Rho2, Shiva Razavi1,4, Allister Suarez1,2, Yu-Chun Lin1,2, Makoto Tanigawa1,4, Brian Huang2, Robert DeRose1,2, Diana Bobb1,2, William Hong5, Sandra B Gabelli5,6,7, John Goutsias3, Takanari Inoue1,2,4.
Abstract
Some protein components of intracellular non-membrane-bound entities, such as RNA granules, are known to form hydrogels in vitro. The physico-chemical properties and functional role of these intracellular hydrogels are difficult to study, primarily due to technical challenges in probing these materials in situ. Here, we present iPOLYMER, a strategy for a rapid induction of protein-based hydrogels inside living cells that explores the chemically inducible dimerization paradigm. Biochemical and biophysical characterizations aided by computational modelling show that the polymer network formed in the cytosol resembles a physiological hydrogel-like entity that acts as a size-dependent molecular sieve. We functionalize these polymers with RNA-binding motifs that sequester polyadenine-containing nucleotides to synthetically mimic RNA granules. These results show that iPOLYMER can be used to synthetically reconstitute the nucleation of biologically functional entities, including RNA granules in intact cells.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29115293 PMCID: PMC5916848 DOI: 10.1038/nmat5006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841