There is a multitude of small (<100nt) RNAs that serve diverse functional roles in biology. Key amongst these is transfer RNA (tRNA), which is among the most ancient RNAs and is part of the translational apparatus in every domain of life. Transfer RNAs are also the most heavily modified class of RNAs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompartmentalization of RNA in biopolymer-rich membraneless organelles is now understood to be pervasive and critical for the function of extant biology and has been proposed as a prebiotically plausible way to accumulate RNA. However, compartment-RNA interactions that drive encapsulation have the potential to influence RNA structure and function in compartment- and RNA sequence-dependent ways. Here, we detail next-generation sequencing (NGS) experiments performed in membraneless compartments called complex coacervates to characterize the fold of many different transfer RNAs (tRNAs) simultaneously under the potentially denaturing conditions of these compartments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComplex coacervate droplets formed by the liquid-liquid phase separation of polyelectrolyte solutions capture several important features of membraneless organelles including their ability to accumulate guest molecules and to provide distinct microenvironments. Here, we examine how polyions in complex coacervates can influence localized guest molecules, leading to a shifted protonation state of the guest molecule in response to its electrostatic environment. A fluorescent ratiometric pH indicator dye was used as a model guest molecule able to report its protonation state in the coacervate phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Compartmentalization of RNA in biopolymer-rich membraneless organelles is now understood to be pervasive and critical for the function of extant biology and has been proposed as a prebiotically-plausible way to accumulate RNA. However, compartment-RNA interactions that drive encapsulation have the potential to influence RNA structure and function in compartment- and RNA sequence-dependent ways. Herein, we detail Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) experiments performed for the first time in membraneless compartments called complex coacervates to characterize the fold of many different transfer RNAs (tRNAs) simultaneously under the potentially denaturing conditions of these compartments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiquid-liquid phase separation has emerged as an important means of intracellular RNA compartmentalization. Some membraneless organelles host two or more compartments serving different putative biochemical roles. The mechanisms for, and functional consequences of, this subcompartmentalization are not yet well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultivalent polyions can undergo complex coacervation, producing membraneless compartments that accumulate ribozymes and enhance catalysis, and offering a mechanism for functional prebiotic compartmentalization in the origins of life. Here, we evaluate the impact of lower, more prebiotically-relevant, polyion multivalency on the functional performance of coacervates as compartments. Positively and negatively charged homopeptides with 1-100 residues and adenosine mono-, di-, and triphosphate nucleotides are used as model polyions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSharp increase in macromolecular crowding induces abnormal chromatin compaction in the cell nucleus, suggesting its non-negligible impact on chromatin structure and function. However, the details of the crowding-induced chromatin compaction remain poorly understood. In this work, we present a computer simulation study on the entropic effect of macromolecular crowding on the interaction between chromatin structural units called nucleosome clutches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhase separation in a biological cell nucleus occurs in a heterogeneous environment filled with a high density of chromatins and thus it is inevitably influenced by interactions with chromatins. As a model system of nuclear body formation in a cell nucleus filled with chromatins, we simulate the phase separation of a low-density Lennard-Jones (LJ) fluid interacting with a long, condensed polymer chain. The influence of the density variation of LJ particles above and below the phase boundary and the role of attractive interactions between LJ particles and polymer segments are investigated at a fixed value of strong self-interaction between LJ particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the influence of macromolecular crowding on interactions between collapsed polymers using computer simulations, to gain insights into biomacromolecular interactions in crowded biological environments. The effective attraction is induced between two collapsed polymers due to the macromolecular crowding, and it is found that the strength of the effective attraction decreases as the crowder size is reduced for a fixed crowder volume fraction, which is sharply contrasted with the conventional viewpoint based on the depletion attraction observed for hard-core spherical colloids. This unusual trend of size-dependence is interpreted by dividing the effective interaction into the polymer-mediated repulsion and crowder-mediated attraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen ice grows, the growth rates are unequal [corrected] along different growth directions and some layers contain planar defective regions. With the aim of helping to understand these phenomena, we report the molecular dynamics simulations of ice growth on the basal and prismatic faces of initial hexagonal ice, using the TIP5P-E water model. By presenting the time evolution of the two-dimensional density profiles of water molecules in each layer and the kinetics of layer formation during ice growth at the temperature of 11 K supercooling, we show that two forms of ice arrangements, hexagonal and cubic, develop competitively within the same ice layer on the basal face, whereas such in-layer stacking-competition is insignificant on the prismatic face.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough distinct growth behaviors on different faces of hexagonal ice have long been suggested, their understanding on a molecular scale has been hampered due to experimental difficulties near interfaces. We present a molecular dynamics simulation study to unravel the molecular origin of anisotropy in the growth kinetics of hexagonal ice by visualizing the formation of transient water structures in the growing ice interface. During ice growth, the formation of transient structures and their rearrangement to the final ice configuration are observed irrespective of growth direction.
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