Amyloid-Forming Segment Induces Aggregation of FUS-LC Domain from Phase Separation Modulated by Site-Specific Phosphorylation.

2019 
Abstract The RNA-binding protein fused in sarcoma (FUS) forms physiological granules and pathological fibrils, which facilitate RNA functions and cause neurodegenerative diseases, respectively. Phosphorylation at Ser/Thr residues may regulate the functional assembly of FUS and prevent pathological aggregation in cells. However, the low-complexity nature of the FUS sequence makes it challenging to characterize how phosphorylation of specific sites within the core amyloid-forming segment affect aggregation. Taking advantage of the recently solved molecular structures of the fibrillar core of the FUS low-complexity (FUS-LC) domain, we systematically investigated the aggregation of repeated segments within the core. We identified a segment with a strong amyloid-forming tendency that induced the aggregation of FUS-LC domain in phase-separated liquid droplets and further seeded the aggregation of full-length FUS. The aggregation propensity and seeding ability of this amyloid-forming segment were modulated by site-specific phosphorylation. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy and computational modeling implied that site-specific phosphorylation at Ser61 plays key roles in FUS assembly by disrupting both intra- and intermolecular interactions that maintain the amyloid core structure.
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