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Condensate size control in the algal pyrenoid

ORAL

Abstract

Biomolecular condensates spatially organize cellular functions, but the regulation of their size, number, and phase transitions is poorly understood. The pyrenoid, an algal biomolecular condensate that mediates one-third of global CO2fixation, typically exists as one condensate per chloroplast, but during cell division it transiently dissolves and reconfigures into multiple smaller condensates. We identified a kinase, KEY1, in the model alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that regulates pyrenoid condensate size, number, dissolution, and function. We show that KEY1 localizes to the condensate and dissolves it by disrupting interactions between its core constituents, the CO2-fixing enzyme Rubisco and its linker protein EPYC1, through EPYC1 phosphorylation. We develop a minimal mathematical model of kinase activity that recapitulates pyrenoid size and number regulation. These results provide a foundation for mechanistic understanding of the regulation of size, number, localization, and phase transitions in pyrenoids and other biomolecular condensates.

Presenters

  • Ned S Wingreen

    Princeton University, Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton NJ 08544, USA

Authors

  • Ned S Wingreen

    Princeton University, Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton NJ 08544, USA

  • Shan He

    Princeton University

  • Linnea Lemma

    Princeton University

  • Alejandro Martinez-Calvo

    Princeton University

  • Guanhua He

    Stanford University

  • Jessica Hennacy

    Princeton University

  • Lianyong Wang

    Princeton University

  • Sabrina Ergun

    Princeton

  • Martin Jonikas

    Princeton University, Princeton

  • Luke Bunday

    Princeton University

  • Angelo Kayser-Browne

    Princeton University

  • Quan Wang

    NIH

  • Cliff Brangwynne

    Princeton University

  • Martin Jonikas

    Princeton University, Princeton