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Multivalent electrostatic pi–cation interaction between synaptophysin and synapsin is responsible for the coacervation

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Authors

Kim, Goeun; Lee, Sang-Eun; Jeong, Seonyoung; Lee, Jeongkun; Park, Daehun; Chang, Sunghoe

Issue Date
2021-09-08
Publisher
BMC
Citation
Molecular Brain. 2021 Sep 08;14(1):137
Keywords
SynaptophysinSynapsinLiquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS)Pi–cation interactionsSynaptic vesicle clusterPresynaptic nerve terminals
Abstract
We recently showed that synaptophysin (Syph) and synapsin (Syn) can induce liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) to cluster small synaptic-like microvesicles in living cells which are highly reminiscent of SV cluster. However, as there is no physical interaction between them, the underlying mechanism for their coacervation remains unknown. Here, we showed that the coacervation between Syph and Syn is primarily governed by multivalent pi–cation electrostatic interactions among tyrosine residues of Syph C-terminal (Ct) and positively charged Syn. We found that Syph Ct is intrinsically disordered and it alone can form liquid droplets by interactions among themselves at high concentration in a crowding environment in vitro or when assisted by additional interactions by tagging with light-sensitive CRY2PHR or subunits of a multimeric protein in living cells. Syph Ct contains 10 repeated sequences, 9 of them start with tyrosine, and mutating 9 tyrosine to serine (9YS) completely abolished the phase separating property of Syph Ct, indicating tyrosine-mediated pi-interactions are critical. We further found that 9YS mutation failed to coacervate with Syn, and since 9YS retains Syphs negative charge, the results indicate that pi–cation interactions rather than simple charge interactions are responsible for their coacervation. In addition to revealing the underlying mechanism of Syph and Syn coacervation, our results also raise the possibility that physiological regulation of pi–cation interactions between Syph and Syn during synaptic activity may contribute to the dynamics of synaptic vesicle clustering.
ISSN
1756-6606
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/174926
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13041-021-00846-y
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