Surface tension and viscosity of protein condensates quantified by micropipette aspiration

2021 | journal article; research paper

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Surface tension and viscosity of protein condensates quantified by micropipette aspiration​
Wang, H.; Kelley, F. M.; Milovanovic, D. ; Schuster, B. S. & Shi, Z.​ (2021) 
Biophysical Reports1(1) art. 100011​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpr.2021.100011 

License

Published Version

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Details

Authors
Wang, Huan; Kelley, Fleurie M.; Milovanovic, Dragomir ; Schuster, Benjamin S.; Shi, Zheng
Abstract
The material properties of biomolecular condensates have been suggested to play important biological and pathological roles. Despite the rapid increase in the number of biomolecules identified that undergo liquid-liquid phase separation, quantitative studies and direct measurements of the material properties of the resulting condensates have been severely lagging behind. Here, we develop a micropipette-based technique that uniquely, to our knowledge, allows quantifications of both the surface tension and viscosity of biomolecular condensates, independent of labeling and surface-wetting effects. We demonstrate the accuracy and versatility of this technique by measuring condensates of LAF-1 RGG domains and a polymer-based aqueous two-phase system. We further confirm our measurements using established condensate fusion and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching assays. We anticipate the micropipette-based technique will be widely applicable to biomolecular condensates and will resolve several limitations regarding current approaches.
Issue Date
2021
Journal
Biophysical Reports 
Project
SFB 1286: Quantitative Synaptologie 
Working Group
RG Rizzoli (Quantitative Synaptology in Space and Time) 
ISSN
2667-0747
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media