FUS Phase Separation Is Modulated by a Molecular Chaperone and Methylation of Arginine Cation-π Interactions

Seema Qamar(University of Cambridge), Guo-Zhen Wang(University of Cambridge), Suzanne J. Randle(University of Cambridge), Francesco Simone Ruggeri(University of Cambridge), Juan A. Varela(University of Cambridge), Julie Qiaojin Lin(University of Cambridge), Emma Claire Phillips(University of Cambridge), Akinori Miyashita(University of Toronto), Declan Williams(University of Toronto), Florian Ströhl(University of Cambridge), William Meadows(University of Cambridge), Rodylyn Rose Ferry(University of Toronto), Victoria Dardov(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Gian Gaetano Tartaglia(Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats), Lindsay A. Farrer(Boston University), Gabriele S. Kaminski Schierle(University of Cambridge), Clemens F. Kaminski(University of Cambridge), Christine E. Holt(University of Cambridge), Paul E. Fraser(University of Toronto), Gerold Schmitt‐Ulms(University of Toronto), David Klenerman(University of Cambridge), Tuomas P. J. Knowles(University of Cambridge), Michele Vendruscolo(University of Cambridge), Peter St George‐Hyslop(University of Toronto)
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Abstract

Reversible phase separation underpins the role of FUS in ribonucleoprotein granules and other membrane-free organelles and is, in part, driven by the intrinsically disordered low-complexity (LC) domain of FUS. Here, we report that cooperative cation-π interactions between tyrosines in the LC domain and arginines in structured C-terminal domains also contribute to phase separation. These interactions are modulated by post-translational arginine methylation, wherein arginine hypomethylation strongly promotes phase separation and gelation. Indeed, significant hypomethylation, which occurs in FUS-associated frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), induces FUS condensation into stable intermolecular β-sheet-rich hydrogels that disrupt RNP granule function and impair new protein synthesis in neuron terminals. We show that transportin acts as a physiological molecular chaperone of FUS in neuron terminals, reducing phase separation and gelation of methylated and hypomethylated FUS and rescuing protein synthesis. These results demonstrate how FUS condensation is physiologically regulated and how perturbations in these mechanisms can lead to disease.


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