Dead or alive: DEAD-box ATPases as regulators of ribonucleoprotein complex condensation
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Author
Date
2021-04Type
- Review Article
Abstract
DEAD-box ATPase proteins are found in all clades of life and have been associated with a diverse array of RNA-processing reactions in eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea. Their highly conserved core enables them to bind RNA, often in an ATP-dependent manner. In the course of the ATP hydrolysis cycle, they undergo conformational rearrangements, which enable them to unwind short RNA duplexes or remodel RNA-protein complexes. Thus, they can function as RNA helicases or chaperones. However, when their conformation is locked, they can also clamp RNA and create ATP-dependent platforms for the formation of higher-order ribonucleoprotein complexes. Recently, it was shown that DEAD-box ATPases globally regulate the phase-separation behavior of RNA-protein complexes in vitro and control the dynamics of RNA-containing membraneless organelles in both pro- and eukaryotic cells. A role of these enzymes as regulators of RNA-protein condensates, or ‘condensases’, suggests a unifying view of how the biochemical activities of DEAD-box ATPases are used to keep cellular condensates dynamic and ‘alive’, and how they regulate the composition and fate of ribonucleoprotein complexes in different RNA processing steps. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000482471Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Biological ChemistryVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
De GruyterSubject
biomolecular condensates; DEAD-box ATPases; liquid-liquid phase separation; membraneless organelles; ribonucleoprotein complexes; RNA processingOrganisational unit
09464 - Weis, Karsten / Weis, Karsten
09464 - Weis, Karsten / Weis, Karsten
Funding
179275 - Structure and Function of the Nuclear Pore Complex (SNF)
193740 - CRSII5_193740 / 1 (SNF)
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