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Light-induced targeting enables proteomics on endogenous condensates

Choongman Lee, Andrea Quintana, Ida Suppanz, Alejandro Gomez‐Auli, Gerhard Mittler, Ibrahim I. Cissé

2024Cell27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endogenous condensates with transient constituents are notoriously difficult to study with common biological assays like mass spectrometry and other proteomics profiling. Here, we report a method for light-induced targeting of endogenous condensates (LiTEC) in living cells. LiTEC combines the identification of molecular zip codes that target the endogenous condensates with optogenetics to enable controlled and reversible partitioning of an arbitrary cargo, such as enzymes commonly used in proteomics, into the condensate in a blue light-dependent manner. We demonstrate a proof of concept by combining LiTEC with proximity-based biotinylation (BioID) and uncover putative components of transcriptional condensates in mouse embryonic stem cells. Our approach opens the road to genome-wide functional studies of endogenous condensates.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyProteomicsEndogenyComputational biologyCell biologyGeneticsBiochemistryGeneUbiquitin and proteasome pathwaysAdvanced Fluorescence Microscopy TechniquesClick Chemistry and Applications
Light-induced targeting enables proteomics on endogenous condensates | Litcius