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  4. Membraneless organelles: phasing out of equilibrium
 
review article

Membraneless organelles: phasing out of equilibrium

Hondele, Maria
•
Heinrich, Stephanie
•
De Los Rios, Paolo  
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December 1, 2020
Emerging Topics In Life Sciences

Over the past years, liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) has emerged as a ubiquitous principle of cellular organization implicated in many biological processes ranging from gene expression to cell division. The formation of biological condensates, like the nucleolus or stress granules, by LLPS is at its core a thermodynamic equilibrium process. However, life does not operate at equilibrium, and cells have evolved multiple strategies to keep condensates in a non-equilibrium state. In this review, we discuss how these non-equilibrium drivers counteract solidification and potentially detrimental aggregation, and at the same time enable biological condensates to perform work and control the flux of substrates and information in a spatial and temporal manner.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1042/ETLS20190190
Web of Science ID

WOS:000596808800008

Author(s)
Hondele, Maria
Heinrich, Stephanie
De Los Rios, Paolo  
Weis, Karsten
Date Issued

2020-12-01

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD

Published in
Emerging Topics In Life Sciences
Volume

4

Issue

3

Start page

331

End page

342

Subjects

Biology

•

Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics

•

rna-polymerase-ii

•

p granules

•

separation

•

protein

•

promotes

•

condensation

•

translation

•

transitions

•

organization

•

centrosome

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBS  
Available on Infoscience
December 23, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/174264
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