
Introduction
Subcellular compartmentalization is essential for all cells and enables the
regulation and optimization of metabolism
6,1
. This is not only true for large and complex
eukaryotic cells, but also for prokaryotes. In recent years, significant progress has been
made to highlight that bacterial cells are highly organized entities often relying on protein-
based strategies to coordinate and compartmentalize complex metabolic
functions
6,9,10,11,12,13
. One of these strategies are protein organelles and compartments
which represent nano-sized functional analogues of eukaryotic membrane organelles and
utilize semipermeable protein shells to sequester specific enzymes and processes. For
example, bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) sequester combinations of enzymes in
self-assembling protein shells and are involved in the anabolic fixation of carbon
14,15
and
catabolic processes like carbon and nitrogen source utilization
7,16
. Besides serving as
nanoscale reaction chambers, another important use of protein compartments is the
storage of nutrients
1,6,10,13
. The most widely distributed protein-based storage system is
ferritin, an 8-12 nm protein cage used by eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells to store iron
2
.
Many cells contain further systems for storing nutrients such as polyphosphate-
17
,
polyhydroxyalkanoate-
18
, and sulfur-storage granules or globules whose detailed
functions, compositions, and formation are still being debated
13,19
. In general, storage
compartments enable organisms to accumulate and retain high-value compounds for
later use when encountering changing, nutrient-limited, or stress conditions
17,18,20
.
A further and only recently discovered class of prokaryotic protein compartments
involved in storage and other functions are encapsulin nanocompartments
(encapsulins)
5,21
. Encapsulins consist of self-assembling protein shells sequestering
dedicated cargo enzymes and are among the most widespread protein compartments in
prokaryotes
5,8,22
. Cargo encapsulation is mediated by targeting sequences present at the
N- or C-terminus of all cargo proteins
5,21, 23,24
. Encapsulin shells possess icosahedral
symmetry with triangulation numbers of T=1 (60 subunits, 24 nm), T=3 (180 subunits,
32 nm), or T=4 (240 subunits, 42 nm) and an evolutionary connection with viral capsids
has been proposed
5,21,25,26,27
. Encapsulins are classified into four families based on
sequence similarity and operon organization, with Family 1 encapsulins having been
shown to be involved in iron storage, detoxification, and stress resistance
8,22,26-29
.
.CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licenseavailable under a
(which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made
The copyright holder for this preprintthis version posted June 22, 2023. ; https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.21.545984doi: bioRxiv preprint