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Mechanosensitive ion channels MSL8, MSL9, and MSL10 have environmentally sensitive intrinsically disordered regions with distinct biophysical characteristics in vitro. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Intrinsically disordered protein regions (IDRs) make up about 30% of all eukaryotic proteins and play crucial roles in various biological functions, especially in responding to environmental stresses.
  • The study focuses on the N-terminal domains of three plant mechanosensitive ion channels (MSL8, MSL9, and MSL10), which were found to be intrinsically disordered through bioinformatics and spectroscopic analysis.
  • MSL10 showed structural changes in different environments, suggesting that these IDRs can self-assemble into condensates and have distinct responses to factors like salt and temperature.

Article Abstract

Intrinsically disordered protein regions (IDRs) are highly dynamic sequences that rapidly sample a collection of conformations over time. In the past several decades, IDRs have emerged as a major component of many proteomes, comprising ~30% of all eukaryotic protein sequences. Proteins with IDRs function in a wide range of biological pathways and are notably enriched in signaling cascades that respond to environmental stresses. Here, we identify and characterize intrinsic disorder in the soluble cytoplasmic N-terminal domains of MSL8, MSL9, and MSL10, three members of the MscS-like (MSL) family of mechanosensitive ion channels. In plants, MSL channels are proposed to mediate cell and organelle osmotic homeostasis. Bioinformatic tools unanimously predicted that the cytosolic N-termini of MSL channels are intrinsically disordered. We examined the N-terminus of MSL10 (MSL10) as an exemplar of these IDRs and circular dichroism spectroscopy confirms its disorder. MSL10 adopted a predominately helical structure when exposed to the helix-inducing compound trifluoroethanol (TFE). Furthermore, in the presence of molecular crowding agents, MSL10 underwent structural changes and exhibited alterations to its homotypic interaction favorability. Lastly, interrogations of collective behavior via in vitro imaging of condensates indicated that MSL8, MSL9, and MSL10 have sharply differing propensities for self-assembly into condensates, both inherently and in response to salt, temperature, and molecular crowding. Taken together, these data establish the N-termini of MSL channels as intrinsically disordered regions with distinct biophysical properties and the potential to respond uniquely to changes in their physiochemical environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10400277PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pld3.515DOI Listing

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