Heterogeneous Slowdown of Dynamics in the Condensate of an Intrinsically Disordered Protein
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The high concentration of proteins and other biological macromolecules inside biomolecular condensates leads to dense and confined environments, which can affect the dynamic ensembles and the time-scales of the conformational transitions. Here we use atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the intrinsically disordered low complexity domain (LCD) of the human fused in sarcoma (FUS) RNA-binding protein to study how self-crowding inside a condensate affects the dynamic motions of the protein. We found a heterogeneous retardation of the protein dynamics in the condensate with respect to the dilute phase, with large-amplitude motions being strongly slowed by up to two orders of magnitude, whereas small-scale motions, such as local backbone fluctuations and side-chain rotations, are less affected. The results support the notion of a liquid-like character of the condensates and show that different protein motions respond differently to the environment.