Programmable DNA Protonuclei Reveal Environmental Context on Protein Phase Separation
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Understanding protein phase separation in cellular environments remains a major challenge, as ex vivo assays often fail to capture the influence of environmental context – such as crowding, multimodal interactions, and the dynamic properties of the cytosol or nucleus. Here, we introduce programmable DNA-based protonuclei (PN) as nucleus-inspired compartments to probe phase separation of the neurodegeneration-linked protein FUS. We show that FUS partitioning and condensate formation are highly sensitive to nucleic acid sequence, spatial confinement, and viscoelastic properties of the PN core. Notably, classical test-tube affinity assays fail to predict protein behavior within the crowded and multivalent PN environment. By tuning DNA crosslinking, we modulate condensate dynamics and suppress liquid-to-solid transitions of FUS – a hallmark of disease. These findings demonstrate that multivalent, confined environments fundamentally reshape protein-nucleic acid interactions and phase behavior. The PN platform complements test-tube assays and complex cellular settings and enables to dissect nuclear condensates under controllable conditions.