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Dynamic assembly of the mRNA m6A methyltransferase complex is regulated by METTL3 phase separation
Authors:Dasol Han  Andrew P. Longhini  Xuemei Zhang  Vivian Hoang  Maxwell Z. Wilson  Kenneth S. Kosik
Affiliation:1. Neuroscience Research Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America;2. Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America; Yale University, UNITED STATES
Abstract:m6A methylation is the most abundant and reversible chemical modification on mRNA with approximately one-fourth of eukaryotic mRNAs harboring at least one m6A-modified base. The recruitment of the mRNA m6A methyltransferase writer complex to phase-separated nuclear speckles is likely to be crucial in its regulation; however, control over the activity of the complex remains unclear. Supported by our observation that a core catalytic subunit of the methyltransferase complex, METTL3, is endogenously colocalized within nuclear speckles as well as in noncolocalized puncta, we tracked the components of the complex with a Cry2-METTL3 fusion construct to disentangle key domains and interactions necessary for the phase separation of METTL3. METTL3 is capable of self-interaction and likely provides the multivalency to drive condensation. Condensates in cells necessarily contain myriad components, each with partition coefficients that establish an entropic barrier that can regulate entry into the condensate. In this regard, we found that, in contrast to the constitutive binding of METTL14 to METTL3 in both the diffuse and the dense phase, WTAP only interacts with METTL3 in dense phase and thereby distinguishes METTL3/METTL14 single complexes in the dilute phase from METTL3/METTL14 multicomponent condensates. Finally, control over METTL3/METTL14 condensation is determined by its small molecule cofactor, S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), which regulates conformations of two gate loops, and some cancer-associated mutations near gate loops can impair METTL3 condensation. Therefore, the link between SAM binding and the control of writer complex phase state suggests that the regulation of its phase state is a potentially critical facet of its functional regulation.

Approximately one-fourth of eukaryotic mRNAs harbor at least one m6A-modified base, but how is this regulated? This study shows that cells can use liquid-liquid phase separation to regulate dynamic assembly of the mRNA m6A methyltransferase complex (METTL3/METTL14/WTAP), with stoichiometries that depend on condensate partitioning in a substrate binding-dependent manner.
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