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- Title
Dehydration entropy drives liquid-liquid phase separation by molecular crowding.
- Authors
Park, Sohee; Barnes, Ryan; Lin, Yanxian; Jeon, Byoung-jin; Najafi, Saeed; Delaney, Kris T.; Fredrickson, Glenn H.; Shea, Joan-Emma; Hwang, Dong Soo; Han, Songi
- Abstract
Complex coacervation driven liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) of biopolymers has been attracting attention as a novel phase in living cells. Studies of LLPS in this context are typically of proteins harboring chemical and structural complexity, leaving unclear which properties are fundamental to complex coacervation versus protein-specific. This study focuses on the role of polyethylene glycol (PEG)—a widely used molecular crowder—in LLPS. Significantly, entropy-driven LLPS is recapitulated with charged polymers lacking hydrophobicity and sequence complexity, and its propensity dramatically enhanced by PEG. Experimental and field-theoretic simulation results are consistent with PEG driving LLPS by dehydration of polymers, and show that PEG exerts its effect without partitioning into the dense coacervate phase. It is then up to biology to impose additional variations of functional significance to the LLPS of biological systems. Liquid-liquid phase separation occurs in cells and can be induced in artificial systems, but the mechanism of the effect of molecular crowders is unclear. Here dehydration entropy-driven phase separation of model charged polymers lacking any chemical complexity or hydrophobicity is shown to be enhanced by polyethylene glycol.
- Subjects
LIQUID-liquid equilibrium; PHASE separation; BIOPOLYMERS; ENTROPY; POLYETHYLENE
- Publication
Communications Chemistry, 2020, Vol 3, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2399-3669
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s42004-020-0328-8