encapsulins
Encapsulins are protein-based nanocompartments found in bacteria and archaea. They consist of a self-assembling icosahedral shell formed by many copies of a single encapsulin shell protein. The shells enclose one or more cargo proteins, which are directed to the interior by short targeting peptides attached to the cargo or to the shell.
Shells typically range from about 20 to 40 nanometers in diameter and adopt icosahedral symmetry, creating
In cells, encapsulins sequester enzymes and reactive cargo, enabling compartmentalization of biochemical reactions. Cargo often includes
Encapsulin gene clusters feature a shell protein gene together with one or more cargo genes, often encoding
Historically, encapsulins were discovered through genome mining and subsequent structural and functional studies, which revealed their