How a Condensed Protein Phase Unravels RNA Structures
A new study in the Journal of Molecular Biology reveals a direct molecular mechanism where the protein FUS, known for forming biomolecular condensates through liquid-liquid phase separation, actively unfolds model RNA G-quadruplex structures. This research provides crucial insights into how phase-separated protein compartments can directly regulate RNA conformation and function, a key process in gene expression regulation and RNA metabolism within the complex cellular environment.
Study Significance: This finding bridges the fields of biomolecular condensates and RNA biology, demonstrating that phase separation is not merely a passive organizational tool but an active regulator of nucleic acid structure. For cell biologists, this implies that the dysregulation of proteins like FUS, often linked to neurodegenerative diseases and cancer cell biology, could disrupt critical RNA processing pathways. Understanding this mechanism opens new avenues for targeting pathological protein-RNA interactions in disease contexts.
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