Condensatopathies as a mechanistic framework for disease and integrated theranostic intervention.
Abstract:
The spatial organization of the cell relies on biomolecular condensates formed via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS). The dysregulation of this physicochemical order drives a growing class of human pathologies. Here, we champion the unifying term "Condensatopathies" and establish a rigorous framework for their classification based on three core criteria: genetic/environmental triggers, demonstrable biophysical defects, and causal toxicity. We synthesize the pathogenic landscape into two distinct yet interconnected mechanisms: Loss-of-Function (LOF), where essential condensates fail to form or harden; and Toxic Gain-of-Function (TGOF), characterized by the formation of aberrant, often solid-like aggregates or oncogenic hubs that hijack cellular machinery. By analyzing representative cases-from the biophysical maturation of TDP-43 in neurodegeneration to the chromatin hijacking by NUP98 fusions in leukemia-we reveal how the loss of "tunable metastability" underpins these disorders. Furthermore, we review how emerging technologies like optogenetics and cryo-ET are decoding these mechanisms. Finally, we propose an integrated "See-and-Treat" theranostic paradigm, utilizing the unique material properties of condensates to design specific diagnostic probes and "molecular scalpels" for precision intervention.