Litcius/Paper detail

The prion-like domain of Fused in Sarcoma is phosphorylated by multiple kinases affecting liquid- and solid-phase transitions

Izzy Owen, Shannon N. Rhoads, Debra Yee, Hala Wyne, Kevin L Gery, Isabelle Hannula, Meenakshi Sundrum, Frank Shewmaker

2020Molecular Biology of the Cell23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) is a ubiquitously expressed protein that can phase-separate from nucleoplasm and cytoplasm into distinct liquid-droplet structures. It is predominantly nuclear and most of its functions are related to RNA and DNA metabolism. Excessive persistence of FUS within cytoplasmic phase-separated assemblies is implicated in the diseases amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia. Phosphorylation of FUS's prion-like domain (PrLD) by nuclear phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-related kinase (PIKK)-family kinases following DNA damage was previously shown to alter FUS's liquid-phase and solid-phase transitions in cell models and in vitro. However, proteomic data suggest that FUS's PrLD is phosphorylated at numerous additional sites, and it is unknown if other non-PIKK and nonnuclear kinases might be influencing FUS's phase transitions. Here we evaluate disease mutations and stress conditions that increase FUS accumulation into cytoplasmic phase-separated structures. We observed that cytoplasmic liquid-phase structures contain FUS phosphorylated at novel sites, which occurred independent of PIKK-family kinases. We engineered phosphomimetic substitutions within FUS's PrLD and observed that mimicking a few phosphorylation sites strongly inhibited FUS solid-phase aggregation, while minimally altering liquid-phase condensation. These effects occurred independent of the exact location of the phosphomimetic substitutions, suggesting that modulation of PrLD phosphorylation may offer therapeutic strategies that are specific for solid-phase aggregation observed in disease.

Topics & Concepts

PhosphorylationBiologyKinaseProtein kinase domainCytoplasmCell biologyMutationDomain (mathematical analysis)Protein-Serine-Threonine KinasesProtein kinase ABiochemistryGeneMutantMathematical analysisMathematicsRNA Research and SplicingWnt/β-catenin signaling in development and cancerSkin and Cellular Biology Research