Biomolecular condensates regulate cellular electrochemical equilibria

Yifan Dai, Zhengqing Zhou, Wen Yu, Yuefeng Ma, Kyeri Kim, Nelson Rivera, Javid Mohammed, Erica Lantelme, Heileen Hsu-Kim, Ashutosh Chilkoti, Lingchong You

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Control of the electrochemical environment in living cells is typically attributed to ion channels. Here, we show that the formation of biomolecular condensates can modulate the electrochemical environment in bacterial cells, which affects cellular processes globally. Condensate formation generates an electric potential gradient, which directly affects the electrochemical properties of a cell, including cytoplasmic pH and membrane potential. Condensate formation also amplifies cell-cell variability of their electrochemical properties due to passive environmental effect. The modulation of the electrochemical equilibria further controls cell-environment interactions, thus directly influencing bacterial survival under antibiotic stress. The condensate-mediated shift in intracellular electrochemical equilibria drives a change of the global gene expression profile. Our work reveals the biochemical functions of condensates, which extend beyond the functions of biomolecules driving and participating in condensate formation, and uncovers a role of condensates in regulating global cellular physiology.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5951-5966.e18
JournalCell
Volume187
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 17 2024

Keywords

  • antibiotics
  • biomolecular condensates
  • electrochemical features of condensates
  • global cellular physiology
  • intracellular electrochemistry
  • ion flux
  • membrane potential

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