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Solid-Phase Separation of Toxic Phosphorothioate Antisense Oligonucleotide-Protein Nucleolar Aggregates Is Cytoprotective
- Source :
- Nucleic Acid Therapeutics. 31:126-144
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Phosphorothioate antisense oligonucleotides (PS-ASOs) interact with proteins and can localize to or induce the formation of a variety of subcellular PS-ASO-protein or PS-ASO-ribonucleoprotein aggregates. In this study, we show that these different aggregates that form with varying compositions at various concentrations in the cytosol, nucleus, and nucleolus may undergo phase separations in cells. Some aggregates can form with both nontoxic and toxic PS-ASOs, such as PS bodies, paraspeckles, and nuclear filaments. However, toxic PS-ASOs have been shown to form unique nucleolar aggregates that result in nucleolar dysfunction and apoptosis. These include liquid-like aggregates that we labeled "cloudy nucleoli" and solid-like perinucleolar filaments. Toxic nucleolar aggregates may undergo solid-phase separation and in the solid phase, protein mobility in and out of the aggregates is limited. Other aggregates appear to undergo liquid-phase separation, including paraspeckles and perinucleolar caps, in which protein mobility is negatively correlated with the binding affinity of the proteins to PS-ASOs. However, PS bodies and nuclear filaments are solid-like aggregates. Importantly, in cells that survived treatment with toxic PS-ASOs, solid-like PS-ASO aggregates accumulated, especially Hsc70-containing nucleolus-like structures, in which modest pre-rRNA transcriptional activity was retained and appeared to mitigate the nucleolar toxicity. This is the first demonstration that exogenous drugs, PS-ASOs, can form aggregates that undergo phase separations and that solid-phase separation of toxic PS-ASO-induced nucleolar aggregates is cytoprotective.
- Subjects :
- Nucleolus
Phosphorothioate Oligonucleotides
Biochemistry
Protein Aggregates
Phase (matter)
Drug Discovery
Genetics
medicine
Humans
Molecular Biology
Cell Proliferation
Cell Nucleus
Chemistry
Paraspeckle
Oligonucleotides, Antisense
Paraspeckles
Cytosol
medicine.anatomical_structure
Ribonucleoproteins
Cytoprotection
Apoptosis
Antisense oligonucleotides
Biophysics
Molecular Medicine
Nucleus
HeLa Cells
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21593345 and 21593337
- Volume :
- 31
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nucleic Acid Therapeutics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b3abafda90faf50ba6615cca09f83ad8