Sciences du Vivant

Bloom Syndrome Helicase Compresses Single‐Stranded DNA into Phase‐Separated Condensates

Published on - Angewandte Chemie International Edition

Authors: Teng Wang, Jiaojiao Hu, Yanan Li, Lulu Bi, Lijuan Guo, Xinshuo Jia, Xia Zhang, Dan Li, Xi‐miao Hou, Mauro Modesti, Xu‐guang Xi, Cong Liu, Bo Sun

Bloom syndrome protein (BLM) is a conserved RecQ family helicase involved in the maintenance of genome stability. BLM has been widely recognized as a genome "caretaker" that processes structured DNA. In contrast, our knowledge of how BLM behaves on single-stranded (ss) DNA is still limited. Here, we demonstrate that BLM possesses the intrinsic ability for phase separation and can co-phase separate with ssDNA to form dynamically arrested protein/ssDNA co-condensates. The introduction of ATP potentiates the capability of BLM to condense on ssDNA, which further promotes the compression of ssDNA against a resistive force of up to 60 piconewtons. Moreover, BLM is also capable of condensing replication protein A (RPA)- or RAD51-coated ssDNA, before which it generates naked ssDNA by dismantling these ssDNA-binding proteins. Overall, our findings identify an unexpected characteristic of a DNA helicase and provide a new angle of protein/ssDNA co-condensation for understanding the genomic instability caused by BLM overexpression under diseased conditions.