Biomolecular Condensates in Disease: Decoding the Material State and Engineering Precision Modulators.
1/5 보강
The recognition of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) as a widespread organizing principle has revolutionized our view of cellular biochemistry.
APA
Han B, Li B, et al. (2026). Biomolecular Condensates in Disease: Decoding the Material State and Engineering Precision Modulators.. International journal of molecular sciences, 27(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27020837
MLA
Han B, et al.. "Biomolecular Condensates in Disease: Decoding the Material State and Engineering Precision Modulators.." International journal of molecular sciences, vol. 27, no. 2, 2026.
PMID
41596484
Abstract
The recognition of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) as a widespread organizing principle has revolutionized our view of cellular biochemistry. By forming biomolecular condensates, cells spatially orchestrate reactions without membranes. However, the dysregulation of this precise physical organization is emerging as a driver of diverse pathologies, collectively termed "Condensatopathies." Unlike traditional proteinopathies defined by static aggregates, these disorders span a dynamic spectrum of material state dysfunctions, from the failure to assemble essential compartments to the formation of aberrant, toxic phases. While research has largely focused on neurodegeneration and cancer, the impact of condensate dysfunction likely extends across broad physiological landscapes. A central unresolved challenge lies in deciphering the "molecular grammar" that governs the transition from functional fluids to pathological solids and, critically, visualizing these transitions in situ. This "material science" perspective presents a profound conundrum for drug discovery: how to target the collective physical state of a protein ensemble rather than a fixed active site. This review navigates the evolving therapeutic horizon, examining the limitations of current pharmacological approaches in addressing the complex "condensatome." Moving beyond inhibition, we propose that the future of intervention lies in "reverse-engineering" the biophysical codes of phase separation. We discuss how deciphering these principles enables the creation of programmable molecular tools-such as synthetic peptides and state-specific degraders-designed to precisely modulate or dismantle pathological condensates, paving the way for a new era of precision medicine governed by soft matter physics.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Biomolecular Condensates; Animals; Neoplasms; Drug Discovery
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