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Showing 1–5 of 5 results
Advanced filters: Author: Keren Lasker Clear advanced filters
  • Scholl et al. show that PopZ forms filamentous condensates driven by its helical domain and inhibited by its disordered region. Phase-dependent conformations modulate client interactions and disruption of filamentation or condensation impairs cellular function and growth.

    • Daniel Scholl
    • Tumara Boyd
    • Keren Lasker
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
    P: 1-13
  • Keren Lasker discusses early work of Lucy Shapiro, which provided first evidence that bacterial cells spatially regulate their cellular processes, akin to their eukaryotic counterparts.

    • Keren Lasker
    Research Highlights
    Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology
    Volume: 23, P: 230
  • “Intracellular phase separation is emerging as a universal principle for organizing biochemical reactions in time and space. Here the authors show that PopZ condensate dynamics support cell division and using PopZ modular architecture, the tunable PopTag platform was developed to enable designer condensates.”

    • Keren Lasker
    • Steven Boeynaems
    • Lucy Shapiro
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-15
  • In an interesting demonstration of how bacterial subcellular organization influences physiology, polar accumulation of PopZ protein in a membraneless microdomain is found to drive asymmetric phosphorylation of CtrA-P, which creates a gradient that is responsible for asymmetric cell division in Caulobacter.

    • Keren Lasker
    • Lexy von Diezmann
    • Lucy Shapiro
    Research
    Nature Microbiology
    Volume: 5, P: 418-429
  • The realization that the cell is abundantly compartmentalized into biomolecular condensates has opened new opportunities for understanding the physics and chemistry underlying many cellular processes1, fundamentally changing the study of biology2. The term biomolecular condensate refers to non-stoichiometric assemblies that are composed of multiple types of macromolecules in cells, occur through phase transitions, and can be investigated by using concepts from soft matter physics3. As such, they are intimately related to aqueous two-phase systems4 and water-in-water emulsions5. Condensates possess tunable emergent properties such as interfaces, interfacial tension, viscoelasticity, network structure, dielectric permittivity, and sometimes interphase pH gradients and electric potentials614. They can form spontaneously in response to specific cellular conditions or to active processes, and cells appear to have mechanisms to control their size and location1517. Importantly, in contrast to membrane-enclosed organelles such as mitochondria or peroxisomes, condensates do not require the presence of a surrounding membrane.

    • Simon Alberti
    • Paolo Arosio
    • Tanja Mittag
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14