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Funded Projects › H2020

LiquOrg · Do liquid crystal-like phases of proteins organize membrane compartments?

H2020Status: SIGNED1 September 202131 August 2028EU funding €11,237,500Call ERC-2020-SyG

We are in the midst of a revolution in our understanding of the internal organization of cells. In the 1950s we learned that lipid bilayer-based membranes serve as containers (organelles) within the cytoplasm. Now we are learning that liquid-like “membrane-less” organelles i.e. without any container, self-assemble based on “liquid-liquid” phase separations. We propose the seemingly radical idea that membrane-bounded organelles– like their membrane-less counterparts- are stabilized or even templated by analogous phase separations of their surface proteins into largely planar liquids akin to liquid crystals. Our unique Synergy team is organized specifically to test this “liquid crystal hypothesis” on the cell’s secretory compartments - ER exit sites (ERES) and the Golgi stack - by employing our complementary skills in physics, physical chemistry, biochemistry and cell biology. We hypothesize based on pilot experiments evidence that the ERES and Golgi self-organize as a multi-layered series of adherent liquid crystal-like phases of “golgin” and similar proteins which surround and enclose their membranes. Their differential adhesion and repulsion would specify the topology and dynamics of the membrane compartments. If this is true, it will literally rewrite the history of cell biology. We will test the ‘liquid crystal’ hypothesis directly, systematically, and quantitatively on an unprecedented scale to either modify/disprove it or place it on a firm rigorous footing. Experiments (Aim 1) with 13 pure golgins in cis and trans pairwise combinations will establish their foundational physical chemistry. Surgically engineered changes in golgins/ERES proteins will alter the rank order (hierarchy) of their affinities for each other and link phase separation physics to cell biology (Aim 2) and be used to establish the structural basis of phase separations and their specificity, and the potential for self-assembly of wholly synthetic biological organelles (Aim 3).

Consortium · 5 organisations

coordinator

CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS

FR · €2,922,775

participant

UNIVERSIDAD COMPLUTENSE DE MADRID

ES · €2,553,940

participant

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON

UK · €3,339,375

participant

FUNDACIO CENTRE DE REGULACIO GENOMICA

ES · €2,421,410

thirdParty

SORBONNE UNIVERSITE

FR

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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