TDP-43 condensation properties specify its RNA-binding and regulatory repertoire

Martina Hallegger(The Francis Crick Institute), Anob M. Chakrabarti(The Francis Crick Institute), Flora Lee(The Francis Crick Institute), Bo Lim Lee(University of Pennsylvania), Aram Gustav Amalietti(The Francis Crick Institute), Hana M. Odeh(University of Pennsylvania), Katie E. Copley(University of Pennsylvania), Jack D. Rubien(University of Pennsylvania), Bede Portz(University of Pennsylvania), Klara Kuret(National Institute of Chemistry), Ina Huppertz(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Frédérique Rau(The Francis Crick Institute), Rickie Patani(The Francis Crick Institute), Nicolas L. Fawzi(Brown University), James Shorter(University of Pennsylvania), Nicholas M. Luscombe(Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University), Jernej Ule(The Francis Crick Institute)
Cell
August 10, 2021
Cited by 245Open Access
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Abstract

Mutations causing amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) often affect the condensation properties of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). However, the role of RBP condensation in the specificity and function of protein-RNA complexes remains unclear. We created a series of TDP-43 C-terminal domain (CTD) variants that exhibited a gradient of low to high condensation propensity, as observed in vitro and by nuclear mobility and foci formation. Notably, a capacity for condensation was required for efficient TDP-43 assembly on subsets of RNA-binding regions, which contain unusually long clusters of motifs of characteristic types and density. These "binding-region condensates" are promoted by homomeric CTD-driven interactions and required for efficient regulation of a subset of bound transcripts, including autoregulation of TDP-43 mRNA. We establish that RBP condensation can occur in a binding-region-specific manner to selectively modulate transcriptome-wide RNA regulation, which has implications for remodeling RNA networks in the context of signaling, disease, and evolution.


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