Abstract
Antibody-mediated immune responses rely on antigen recognition by the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) and the proper engagement of its intracellular signal effector proteins. Src homology (SH) 2 domain-containing leukocyte protein of 65 kDa (SLP65) is the key scaffold protein mediating BCR signaling. In resting B cells, SLP65 colocalizes with Cbl-interacting protein of 85 kDa (CIN85) in cytoplasmic granules whose formation is not fully understood. Here we show that effective B cell activation requires tripartite phase separation of SLP65, CIN85, and lipid vesicles into droplets via vesicle binding of SLP65 and promiscuous interactions between nine SH3 domains of the trimeric CIN85 and the proline-rich motifs (PRMs) of SLP65. Vesicles are clustered and the dynamical structure of SLP65 persists in the droplet phase in vitro. Our results demonstrate that phase separation driven by concerted transient interactions between scaffold proteins and vesicles is a cellular mechanism to concentrate and organize signal transducers.
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Introduction
Ligation of the BCR by cognate antigen results in the recruitment and activation of the cytosolic spleen tyrosine kinase Syk that in turn phosphorylates the enzymatically inert adapter protein SLP651, also called B cell linker protein (BLNK)2. Apart from its C-terminal SH2 domain, SLP65 is an intrinsically disordered protein (IDP)3 that contains multiple tyrosine phosphorylation sites and proline-rich motifs (PRMs) to interact in a specific manner with SH2 and SH3 domain-containing ligands, respectively4,5. Phosphorylated SLP65 recruits Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) and Phospholipase C-γ2 (PLCG2)6,7,8 to trigger several intracellular B cell activation pathways such as mobilization of the second messenger Ca2+ and nuclear translocation of the pivotal transcription factor NF-κB9,10. Hence, SLP65 is the signal gatekeeper of B cell activation. Indeed, loss of SLP65 expression or its function severely compromises the development and function of B cells in mice and humans11,12.
More recently, we found that the signaling function of SLP65 relies on its interaction with intracellular vesicles to which it is attached by virtue of an N-terminal lipid binding moiety13,14. A majority of these vesicles stained positive for vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) 7 and quinacrine, but there was no unique marker or combination of markers characterizing a particular cellular vesicle pool that specifically attracts SLP65 molecules. However, the vesicular compartmentalization of SLP65 appeared to be critical for the stimulation-independent (i.e. constitutive) association of SLP65 with CIN8513,15. The association of SLP65 and CIN85 is caused by atypical SH3 domain docking motifs in SLP65 that associate in a promiscuous manner with the three N-terminal SH3 domains of CIN8515. A C-terminal coiled coil domain of CIN85 forms stable CIN85 trimers that drive multimerization of SLP65. Functional studies showed that the formation of a permanent SLP65/CIN85 oligomeric complex in resting B cells is mandatory for proper B cell activation4,16. In humans, the loss of CIN85 expression causes severe antibody deficiency caused by B cell-intrinsic signaling defects, highlighting the non-redundant function of CIN85 for BCR signal transduction17.
To elucidate how exactly the concerted interactions between SLP65, CIN85 and vesicles promote B cell activation, we used a combination of various methods to investigate the structure of these complexes and their functional signaling role in the live B cell. Here we show that all three components act in concert to drive a tripartite liquid-liquid phase separation process in vitro at physiological protein concentrations. In the live B cell, this results in the formation of intracellular signaling bodies or droplets that are reminiscent of other phase-separated organelles such as stress granules or RNA transport granules18,19,20.
Results
Tripartite phase separation at physiological concentrations
In accordance with previously published data13,15, citrine-tagged wild-type SLP65 but not mutant versions of SLP65 lacking either the N-terminal lipid binding domain or the CIN85-interacting PRMs formed submicrometer granules in resting B cells (Fig. 1a). The subcellular localization patterns strictly correlated with the ability or disability of SLP65 to trigger mobilization of the second messenger Ca2+ on BCR ligation (Supplementary Fig. 1). Hence, the formation of granules through coordinated interactions of SLP65 with both vesicles and CIN85 appeared requisite for proper SLP65 signaling as suggested previously13,15. Next, we investigated by confocal fluorescence microscopy, whether granule formation can be recapitulated in vitro using recombinantly expressed SLP65 and CIN85 and synthetic lipid vesicles in different combinations. We found that in the absence of vesicles, SLP65 undergoes phase separation when mixed with a monomeric CIN851-333 version lacking the trimerizing C-terminal coiled coil domain at and above 60 µM concentration of both proteins (Fig. 1b–c). The threshold concentration for phase separation was lowered to 10 µM when SLP65 was mixed with trimeric CIN85Δ57 (Fig. 1d). This CIN85 variant lacking 57 amino acids in the center of the protein was used because full-length CIN85 could not be recombinantly produced in sufficient quantities. However, we confirmed the functionality of the CIN85Δ57 version by reconstitution experiments of CIN85-deficient B cells (Supplementary Fig. 2). These results showed that SLP65 and CIN85 can undergo phase separation and that the phase separation boundary is controlled by their valency, which was mediated by three and nine SH3 domains of the monomeric and trimeric CIN85 forms, respectively. The promoting role of high valency for droplet formation is a common feature of phase-separating proteins21.
The SLP65/CIN85 droplets formed at and above 10 µM were about 10 µm in diameter, which is similar to or even larger than the diameter of the B cell itself. We therefore tested a possible contribution of vesicles and investigated whether the presence of small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) in our in vitro approach would change the diameter of the droplets and/or lower the protein concentration needed for initiating the phase separation process. Indeed, addition of SUVs promoted droplet formation at 20 times lower protein concentrations, namely 0.5 μM (Fig. 1e). Importantly, this concentration was similar to the endogenous concentrations of SLP65 and CIN85 in DG75 and primary human B cells (Supplementary Fig. 3). Thus, phase separation of SLP65 and CIN85 occurs in vitro at protein concentrations found in vivo, but only in the presence of vesicles. This finding was confirmed further by the increased phase transition threshold of 10 µM for the N-terminal SLP65 deletion mutant, SLP65ΔN (Fig. 1f), which is unable to attach to vesicles13 and that does neither support granule formation nor BCR-activated Ca2+ mobilization when expressed in live B cells (see Fig. 1a and Supplementary Fig. 1). Importantly, no phase separation was observed when SLP65 was mixed with SUVs in the absence of CIN85Δ57 (Fig. 1g) demonstrating again the concerted action of all three components that is needed for droplet formation in vitro. This finding recapitulated in vivo requirements of droplet formation and signaling. When SLP65-deficient B cells were reconstituted with a SLP65 variant that contained Arg-to-Ala substitutions in two of its PRMs to prevent binding to CIN85, granules were absent and the Ca2+ flux response was abrogated (Fig. 1a and Supplementary Fig. 1). Finally, the in vitro-assembled droplets were 1–2 µm in diameter, which closely resembled that of the granules observed in live B cells (Fig. 1a, e). Taken together, these results demonstrated that all three components necessary for in vitro phase separation are also essential for the proper subcellular localization and signaling competence of SLP65 in vivo. The vesicular attachment of SLP65 appears to provide a local seeding point that concentrates SLP65 to facilitate the recruitment of CIN85 and to initiate phase separation.
SUVs rather than LUVs drive phase separation
To further elucidate the role of vesicles in promoting droplet formation of SLP65/CIN85 complexes, we first tested the impact of the vesicle radius. We generated two types of neutral liposomes composed of 75 mol% 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) and 25 mol% 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE) with mean hydrodynamic radii (Rh) of 20 nm and 60 nm, representing SUVs and large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs), respectively. Liposomes were mixed with recombinantly produced wild-type SLP65 and subjected to gradient ultracentrifugation upon which vesicles floated on the top of the tube. Individual fractions were tested for the presence of SLP65 by immunoblotting. This type of liposome floatation assay revealed a striking binding preference of SLP65 for SUVs with Rh of 20 nm (Fig. 2a). Furthermore, these neutral SUVs promoted phase transition of SLP65 and CIN85 with a transition threshold of 1 µM that was similar to that for negatively charged SUVs containing 30 mol% of cholesterol (Fig. 2b) – a common lipid composition reported for vesicles in mammalian cells22.
These data showed that the tripartite phase transition is facilitated by SUVs rather than LUVs, indicating that SLP65 attaches preferentially at small vesicles. Hence, the N-terminal lipid binding domain of SLP65 appeared to be sensitive to membrane curvature. To further investigate whether other SUV binding domains covalently connected to SLP65 would show phase separation and be functional in B cells, we exchanged the wild-type SLP65 N-terminus for another curvature sensing domain, the N-BAR (Bin-Amphiphysin-Rvs) domain of Amphiphysin, and expressed the resulting chimeric fusion protein in SLP65-negative DT40 B cells in order to then test its subcellular localization and signaling capacity (Fig. 2c–d). The N-BAR domain was reported to have a pronounced binding preference for small, i.e. highly curved, vesicles23,24. The chimeric N-BAR-SLP65ΔN was expressed in SLP65-deficient B cells in similar amounts and fully restored Ca2+ mobilization to wild-type level (Fig. 2c). The signaling-competent N-BAR-SLP65ΔN protein also formed dot-like speckles (Fig. 2d) that were reminiscent of those observed for wild-type SLP65 granules (see above). Furthermore, N-BAR-SLP65ΔN translocated to sites of BCR activation at the plasma membrane following BCR ligation (Fig. 2d). Collectively, these data showed that the N-terminal lipid binding domain preferentially attaches at small vesicles with curved membranes and that this feature allows for tripartite phase separation at physiological concentrations, i.e. in vitro as well as in vivo.
Vesicle clustering in the droplet phase revealed by cryo-ET
Since SUVs are required for SLP65 and CIN85Δ57 to phase-separate at their physiological concentrations, we sought to investigate the ultrastructural organization within the droplets by cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) and assess their distribution in the in vitro phase-separated samples (Fig. 3a). The cryo-ET data showed that while the center is tightly packed, the vesicle concentration drops quickly toward the phase border. Furthermore, the tomograms showed a stochastic distribution of SUVs inside the droplets and an average surface-to-surface distance of 5 nm (Fig. 3b). The radius of vesicles within the phase-separated compartment was found to be 9.10 ± 0.03 nm (Fig. 3c). Taken together, the tomography data therefore supports the idea that formation of the droplets is driven by tripartite phase separation between SLP65, CIN85, and highly curved vesicles.
SLP65 is 10-fold enriched in the droplet phase
We also characterized phase-separated SLP65/CIN85 droplets and assessed how strongly SLP65 is enriched in the droplet phase by quantification of its partition coefficients using the fluorescence intensity (Supplementary Fig. 4). This approach revealed that in the absence of SUVs, concentration of SLP65 in the droplet phase was found to be three to ten times higher than in the dispersed phase. Despite the moderate difference in concentration, distinct spherical liquid phases were also observable by bright-field imaging (Supplementary Fig. 5). Importantly, the addition of SUVs resulted in an augmented ten-fold enrichment of SLP65 when mixed at the transition threshold concentration of 0.5 μM, and the partition coefficient further increased with higher concentrations of SLP65 and CIN85Δ57 (Supplementary Fig. 4). These data further emphasize the importance of SUVs in the formation of phase-separated SLP65/CIN85 signaling complexes.
Phase-separated SLP65 retains dynamic flexibility
Finally, we also characterized phase-separated SLP65 by NMR spectroscopy to gain structural insight at the atomic level. The sharp peaks observed in the 15N-HSQC (heteronuclear single quantum coherence) spectrum of SLP65 are typical for IDPs, implying fast reorientation motion of protein segments. Compared to SLP65 alone, phase-separated SLP65 induced by the addition of either CIN851-333, CIN85Δ57, or CIN85Δ57 and SUVs exhibited similarly sharp peaks, as exemplified by the almost equal peak intensity for residues away from the binding sites (Fig. 4a–c) as well as the 15N relaxation data (Supplementary Fig. 6). These results showed that fluidity is completely preserved in phase-separated SLP65 in the absence, as well as in the presence of vesicles. Hence, functionally relevant motifs within SLP65, e.g. tyrosine phosphorylation sites, are equally well accessible under both conditions. Indeed, Syk-phosphorylated SLP65 retains its potential to phase-separate with CIN85 and SUVs. (Supplementary Fig. 7). Accordingly, the five tyrosine phosphorylation sites are not involved in the binding to CIN85’s SH3 domains and therefore not expected to interfere with the SLP65/CIN85 interaction.
For the mixtures containing SUVs, the observed 10% signal loss in the NMR spectra (Fig. 4c, depicted in green and cyan) was due to fractions of SLP65 interacting with SUVs that rotate much slower and did not depend on phase separation, i.e. on the presence or absence of CIN85Δ57. Backbone dynamics of SLP65 was not affected significantly by phase separation due to the relatively low partition coefficients (Supplementary Fig. 4). When concentrations of SLP65 and CIN851-333 were increased from 120 μM to 2400 μM, the 15N lines were broadened by 1.7-fold only (Supplementary Fig. 6), indicating a modest increase in viscosity upon a substantial increase in protein concentration. This is in line with the NMR studies on phase-separated FUS LC25 and Ddx426 that revealed fluidity reduction by a factor of 4–6 when concentrations were increased by 50 to 140-fold. In addition to the dynamics, chemical shifts of the majority of the peaks were also unchanged (Fig. 4a). Taken together, phase separation concentrates SLP65 without altering its dynamic structure, particularly the regions surrounding the tyrosine phosphorylation sites that bind downstream effectors.
Multivalent SH3 domain-mediated interactions have been shown to drive protein phase separation21. CIN85’s SH3 domains bind to multiple PRMs on SLP65 with different affinities (Fig. 4c–d). Amide resonance peaks of the first three PRMs (i.e. V47, A115, and V164) were shifted progressively in the titration series, indicating fast exchange between bound and unbound forms (Fig. 4d, left). Conversely, the peaks of the last three PRMs (i.e. S243, E279, and R312) were broadened beyond detection, which is indicative of tighter bindings (Fig. 4d, right). At 15 μM concentrations of SLP65 and CIN85Δ57, where phase separation has already occurred, only the high-affinity PRMs were involved in the interactions (Fig. 4c, depicted in orange and cyan). These data suggest that at low concentrations of SLP65 and CIN85, the high-affinity PRMs are the major interaction sites that drive phase separation in vivo, while the others remain accessible to different binding partners of SLP65. To investigate their binding specificity, we used paramagnetic relaxation enhancement to probe the interactions between a targeted PRM of SLP65 and the three SH3 domains of CIN85. The paramagnetic relaxation data indicate that all SH3 domains bind to the strongly interacting PRMs in a promiscuous manner (Supplementary Fig. 8), minimizing entropy loss when the droplet phase forms21. In summary, these data showed that the structural parameters of the interaction between SLP65 and CIN85 obey to those found for other phase-separating entities.
Discussion
Liquid-liquid phase separation of proteins and RNA18,19,20 has been reported to underlie the formation of various functionally important nuclear and cytoplasmic membrane-less organelles27,28,29,30,31. The tripartite phase separation of B-lymphoid signaling elements described here represents a concept in BCR signal orchestration, which is unique for several reasons. First, at physiological concentrations, both proteins and vesicles are essential for phase separation. This concerted action is different from the recently described synaptic vesicles recruitment to already phase-separated Synapsin 132. Second, phase separation of SLP65 and CIN85 on the surface of highly curved cytosolic vesicles differs from clustering of the transmembraneous proteins Linker for Activation of T cells (LAT)33 and Nephrin34 at the relatively flat plasma membrane. Third, SLP65 has a rather low partition coefficient in the tripartite system compared to other phase-separating proteins studied so far. The partition coefficient may depend on several factors including the type, valency, and strength of the interactions involved. Indeed, the fluidity of SLP65 is reduced only marginally in the phase-separated state to participate in dynamic signal processes. Qualitatively, the mean distance between the vesicles of 5 nm and even the most extreme distance of 20 nm measured by cryo-ET fall within the estimated lengths of two intrinsically disordered SLP65 molecules, each bound to different vesicles and held together by CIN85 molecules. Although vesicles co-phase separate together with SLP65 and CIN85 in vitro and our results demonstrate a strong correlation between the phase separation transition threshold in vitro and the granules formation in B cell, it will be important to further investigate the vesicle distribution in the granules within the B cell by in situ approaches. Nevertheless, vesicle-driven self-organization of signal transducing elements into granules has not been described before as a mode of subcellular compartmentalization.
Signal transducers often have a modular architecture where multiple interaction domains are flexibly linked and thus can integrate inputs from different proteins to tune their signals. Meanwhile, multivalency and structural disorder are also properties that can promote their phase separation, as shown here19,20,21,31. Hence, phase transition may be an additional mechanism that allows even more robust spatial and temporal control of signal transduction. The engagement of preformed signaling microclusters enables their rapid engagement by ligated cell surface receptors in contrast to recruiting signal effectors in a stepwise manner. In fact, high receptor signal sensitivity is particularly needed for extracellular ligands at low concentrations, e.g. pathogens or hormones. The organization of functionally related signaling components into distinct subcellular compartments is likely to contribute to signal specificity, a phenomenon that is still enigmatic. It is conceivable that besides SLP65 and CIN85, additional BCR-controlled effectors are recruited to the granules in a dynamic manner. Future experiments on the ultrastructure, composition and transport of the vesicular signal granules are needed to address these fundamental aspects of receptor biology.
Methods
Sample preparations for in vitro experiments
SLP651–330, SLP6540–330, and CIN851–333 were expressed in Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) (New England Biolabs) as fusion proteins with N-terminal His7-tag. The proteins were first purified by metal affinity chromatography (Protino Ni-NTA, Macherey Nagel). The His7-tag was removed by proteolytic cleavage with TEV protease and the proteins were finally purified by size exclusion chromatography on a HiLoad 16/60 SD 75 gel filtration column (GE Healthcare). The mutants SLP6540–330 (C271A), SLP6540–330 (C271A, S141C), SLP6540–330 (C271A, S236C), SLP6540–330 (C271A, Q302C), SLP6540–330 (C271A, R247A, S236C) and SLP6540–330 (R280A) were all generated by PCR-based mutagenesis (Quikchange II, Agilent). The DNA fragment coding for CIN85Δ57 (deletion of residues 369-425) was made by overlap extension PCR using the primers 5′-GCGTCTAGAGGATCCATGGTGGAGGCCATAGTG GAG-3′, 5′-GTC CTC GAG GAA TTC TCA TTT TGA TTG TAG AGC TTT CTT TAT GTC G-3′, 5′-GTG TGT GTC AGC GGA CCC ACT CTT TCA GGA GGT ATC TTT TTA ATT TCA TG-3′, and 5′-CAT GAA ATT AAA AAG ATA CCT CCT GAA AGA GTG GGT CCG CTG ACA CAC AC-3′ and cloned into a modified pET28a vector (Novagen). Protein expression and purification was performed as described above. Protein samples of different SLP65 and CIN85 constructs were finally transferred by dialysis into buffer containing 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM TCEP, and 0.5 mM Pefabloc.
Atto 430LS dye (Atto-Tec) was conjugated to either SLP651-330 or SLP6540–330 at residue C271 via maleimide thiol reaction. After 2-h incubation, unbound dye was removed by size exclusion chromatography (Superdex 75 10/300 GL). The final protein concentration was determined by UV absorbance at 280 nm, taking into account the dye’s maximum absorbance at 430 nm and its relative absorbance at 280 nm.
To prepare the vesicles, a total molar concentration of 5 mM phospholipids with the different phospholipid compositions (Avanti Polar Lipids) was mixed in chloroform, dried under nitrogen stream, and lyophilized overnight. The lipid film was then resuspended in the HEPES buffer, sonicated extensively, and extruded through 50-nm and 100-nm filters (Avanti Polar Lipids) to make 20-nm SUVs and 60-nm LUVs, respectively. The vesicle solution was diluted to a final phospholipids concentration of 1 mM for the in vitro reconstitution experiments. The hydrodynamic radius was determined by dynamic light scattering (Wyatt Technology).
Confocal fluorescence microscopy
Atto 430LS-tagged SLP651–330, CIN851–333 or CIN85Δ57, and SUVs were mixed at the indicated concentrations in a 20-μl volume, incubated at room temperature for over 1 h, and then transferred to uncoated 8-well μ-Slide (ibidi) for microscopy. Confocal fluorescence and bright-field microscopy were performed using Leica TCS SP5 microscope with a water immersion objective (Leica HCX PL APO CS 63 × /1.20). Atto 430LS-tagged SLP651–330 was illuminated by 458-nm laser (5 to 20% transmitted power) and observed within the bandwidth of 500–600 nm. Bright-field imaging was performed using 2% laser power of 488 nm and observed via a bright-field filter. The images were acquired at 400 Hz without line averaging. For live-cell imaging, cells were resuspended in serum-free buffer and seeded in glass-covered dishes. Images were recorded using a Leica TCS SP2 LSM. Fluorescence images were analyzed using ImageJ. The single side dimension of each region of interest (ROI) was either 61.63 μm (for SLP65’s concentration ≥ 5 μM) or 20.54 μm (for SLP65’s concentration <2 μM). The pixel size was either 481.5 nm or 160.5 nm, respectively. To quantify fluorescence intensities inside and outside of the droplets, first the “Threshold” function was applied using default algorithm, and then a mask for the droplets was generated from the binary image using the “Analyze Particles” function. The “Size” parameter had to be adjusted to include all visually distinguishable droplets and the “Circularity” parameter was set as 0.1–1.0. Index of dispersion (i.e. ratio of intensity variance to mean) and partition coefficient (i.e. ratio of intensity inside to outside of droplets) were calculated by Matlab scripts.
Cells and expression vectors and antibodies
DG75 B cells (DSMZ ACC83) were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, 3 mM L-glutamine, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, 50 µM 2-mercaptoethanol and antibiotics. DT40 cells (ATCC CRL-2111) were cultured in medium containing 1% chicken serum and no pyruvate. BCR stimulation of the cells was performed with 0.5 µg/ml of F(ab’)2-anti-human IgM (Jackson ImmunoResearch) at 37 °C or 2 µg/ml anti-chicken-IgM (clone M4; Southern Biotechnology) at room temperature.
The cDNAs encoding human CIN85 and SLP65, respectively, were cloned into the pMSCV vector (BD Biosciences) containing the sequence for the EGFP variant citrine, resulting in N-terminal citrine-tagged proteins. In addition to the wild-type protein-encoding constructs, similar cloning was performed to express variants. The CIN85-Δ57 variant lacks amino acid residues 369–425, CIN85-ΔCC the amino acid residues 594–665, SLP65ΔN amino acids 1–45, and SLP65ΔPRM harbors R-to-A exchanges as described previously4. To express the N-BAR-SLP65ΔN chimeric protein, construct encoding the amino acid residues 2–239 of murine Amphiphysin N-terminally fused to SLP65ΔN was generated by overlap extension PCR using the primers 5′-TAATAGATCTCGCCGACATCAAGACGGGCATCT-3′, 5′-GCTCTCTGAAGCGTAGTCGTCAGCATGCTGATCACCGAGT-3′, 5′-GAGCAGTGGTGACTGGTGACTACGCTTCAGAGAGCCCTG-3′, and 5′-TAATGCGGCCGCCTACTCCAGGCGCCGCGTGAA-3′. Empty EGFP encoding vector served as the control. The resulting expression plasmids were transduced into the CIN85-deficient DG75 B cells and SLP65-deficient DT40 cells, respectively. Transduced cells were subsequently subjected to Western Blot, Ca2+ flux, or imaging analyses. Utilized antibodies were diluted 1:1000 and are specific for SLP65 (clone 2B11, Santa Cruz Biotechnology sc-8003), CIN85 (clone D1A4, Cell Signalling Technology 12304), CD2AP (R&D Systems AF4474), or actin (clone 13E5, Cell Signalling Technology 4970). Cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations were monitored by flow cytometric analysis of cells that were loaded with 1 µM Indo1-AM (Thermo)3.
Cryo-electron tomography
Sample preparation: for cryo-ET experiments, proteins (1 μM SLP651–330 and 1 μM CIN85Δ57) and SUVs (1 mM) were mixed in an Eppendorf tube and incubated for 45 min. In all, 4 µL of said suspension were carefully applied to R2/1 copper TEM grids (Quantifoil), which were subsequently plunge frozen on a Vitrobot Mark IV (FEI, settings: blot force = 10, blot time = 10 s, temperature = 21 °C, humidity = 90%). The samples were stored under LN2 until use. Vesicle diameters are not changed by the preparation procedure35.
Data acquisition: the grids were screened for sites suitable for cryo-ET in low magnification and areas were chosen that still allowed for data acquisition at reasonable exposure timings (thickness <200–300 nm). Cryo tomograms were obtained on a transmission electron microscope (Titan Krios, FEG 300 kV, FEI) with a post-column energy-filter (968 Quantum K2, Gatan) using a defocus range of −5 to −3.5 µm and an EFTEM magnification of ×42,000 (calibrated pixel size 3.42 Å). Images were recorded with a direct electron detector camera (K2 Summit, Gatan) in dose-fractionation mode and a total dose of ~80 e−/Å2 per tomogram using SerialEM36. The acquisition was controlled by an in-house script using a dose-symmetric tilt scheme37 with an angle increment of 2°. The stage was tilted between 60° and −60° starting at 0°. Frames were aligned using MotionCor238, and tomogram reconstruction was performed in IMOD39.
Visualization: to enhanced contrast of the TEM insets, summed projections of five slices each are shown. Vesicles were manually segmented for 3D-visualization in AMIRA 6.2 (ThermoFisher) and processed using an in-house python script and Matlab (Mathworks).
NMR spectroscopy
15N-labeled SLP651-330 and CIN851-333 were expressed in M9 minimal medium supplemented with 15N-NH4Cl as nitrogen source. Protein expression and purification was performed as described above. The samples were finally transferred by dialysis into buffer containing 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM TCEP, and 0.5 mM Pefabloc. In total, 4% D2O and 0.5 mM DSS were added as internal reference and the samples were kept inside 3-mm Shigemi or normal NMR tubes.
For PRE measurements, either SLP6540-330 that naturally contains a single cysteine (C271), or other individual cysteine mutants on the SLP6540-330 (C271A) construct (see above) were ligated with the nitroxide spin label MTSL (1-oxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-d-pyrroline-3-methyl)-methanethiosulfonate (Toronto Research Chemicals, Toronto)40.
All NMR measurements were performed at 293 K on Bruker’s 800 MHz and 900 MHz spectrometer that are equipped with a z-gradient cryoprobe. The sensitivity-enhanced 15N-HSQC with water-flipback pulses were measured with a recycle delay of 1 s and indirect-dimension tmax of 55–70 ms (NS = 8–140, cosine-squared function in both dimensions). The residue-specific 15N transverse cross-correlated relaxation rates were measured using 2D TRACT experiment15,41 with variable delays (NS = 8–80, cosine-squared function in both dimensions) and fitted to single exponential decay. The 1H R2-PRE was measured on 15N-labeled CIN851-333 mixed with MTSL-tagged SLP65 constructs at 10:1 molar ratio using a two-point delay (Δt = 7 ms) in the first INEPT period of a TROSY experiment42 (NS = 64–80, cosine-squared function in both dimensions) and analyzing the peak intensities. The corresponding SLP65 constructs without MTSL were used as diamagnetic reference in the presence of 1 mM TCEP.
Data availability
Data supporting the findings of this manuscript are available from the corresponding authors upon reasonable request. A reporting summary for this Article is available as a Supplementary Information file. The source data underlying Figs. 1c–e, 2b, 3b, c, 4c, and Supplementary Figs. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6b, d, and 7 are provided as a Source Data file.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Max Planck Society. We thank the DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) for support in the framework of the SFB860 project B05. The confocal fluorescence microscopy was performed at the Facility for Innovative Light Microscopy (FILM) at Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, and Dirk Kamin is thanked for technical assistance. We thank Claudia Schwiegk for excellent technical assistance in recombinant protein production. We are grateful for discussion with Thomas Burg.
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L.E.W. conceptualized and conducted the in vitro droplet reconstitution experiments by confocal fluorescence microscopy and NMR spectroscopy and analyzed the data. J.M. prepared the samples for cryo-ET and performed the droplet reconstitution experiments. Z.H. and P.S.E. recorded and analyzed the cryo-ET data. S.B. contributed the protein samples for the in vitro experiments, NMR and cryo-ET. A.B., S.P. and M.E. performed in vivo reconstitution experiments and characterized the various B cell lines by flow cytometry, confocal fluorescence microscopy, and biochemical methods. L.E.W., S.B., C.G., J.W., J.P. and P.S.E. wrote the manuscript. C.G., J.P. and J.W. designed the work.
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Wong, L.E., Bhatt, A., Erdmann, P.S. et al. Tripartite phase separation of two signal effectors with vesicles priming B cell responsiveness. Nat Commun 11, 848 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-14544-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-14544-1
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