We have successfully designed membrane-less and thin-film organelles within living eukaryotic cells, enabling them to carry multiple genetic codes. This work demonstrates the principles of how phase separation can be used to spatially segregate novel functionalities within eukaryotic cells. Beyond deepening our fundamental understanding of how intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) can achieve complex functionality, this research provides a new platform for engineering cellular mechanisms in eukaryotes.
In a major milestone, we developed an in situ labeling method to visualize the conformation of IDPs within functional nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) for the first time. The paper by Miao et al. consolidates our lab’s expertise in chemical biology, synthetic biology, designer organelle engineering, high-resolution fluorescence tool development, and microscope engineering into one comprehensive achievement. In collaboration with molecular dynamics simulations conducted by the Hummer lab, we produced the first experimentally validated molecular movie of the NPC, resolving the ~50 MDa disordered proteins, which, even in the highest resolution electron tomograms, previously appeared only as voids.