De novo designed short peptide tags for synthetic protein condensates in mammalian cells

20 February 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

In mammalian cells, protein condensates underlie diverse cell functions. Intensive synthetic biological research has been devoted to fabricating liquid droplets using de novo peptides/proteins designed from scratch in test tubes or bacterial cells. However, the development of de novo sequences for synthetic droplets forming in eukaryotes is challenging. Here, we report YK peptides, comprising 9–15 residues of alternating repeats of tyrosine and lysine, which form reversible amyloid-like fibrils accompanied by binding with poly-anion species such as ATP. By genetically tagging the YK peptide, superfolder GFPs assemble into artificial liquid-like droplets in living cells. Rational design of the YK system allows fine-tuning of the fluidity and construction of multi-component droplets. Furthermore, the YK system not only facilitates intracellular reconstitution of simplified models for natural protein condensates, but it also provides a toolbox for the systematic creation of droplets with different dynamicity and composition for in situ evaluation.

Keywords

de novo peptide
self-assembly
protein condensates
liquid droplet

Supplementary materials

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