Abstract
bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2026 Feb 18:2026.02.17.706410. doi: 10.64898/2026.02.17.706410.
ABSTRACT
The RNA-binding protein Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) undergoes phase separation associated with RNA processing. However, the prion-like low complexity (LC) domain of FUS forms solid-like aggregates in neurodegenerative diseases. Whether the formation of β-sheet structure associated with pathology is also physiologically/functionally relevant is debated. Similarly, if mislocalization alone or concomitant aggregation is responsible for FUS gain-of-function toxicity remains to be probed. Here, we introduce β-sheet breaking proline residues into FUS LC with the goal of preventing cross-β-driven aggregation without disrupting essential functions and phase separation. β-sheet-deficient FUS variants maintain native-like global motions, disorder, and phase separation, but no longer show a liquid-to-solid transition (LST). Biochemical partitioning, cellular localization, and auto- and cross-regulatory functions of FUS all remain essentially unchanged. Conversely, FUS-induced neurodegeneration in several Drosophila models is drastically reduced. These findings suggest a strategy for mitigating disease-related toxicity through backbone structure modulation to prevent prion-like domain protein aggregation.
PMID:41756850 | PMC:PMC12934744 | DOI:10.64898/2026.02.17.706410
UK DRI Authors