Abstract

Studies on coat protein I (COPI) have contributed to a basic understanding of how coat proteins generate vesicles to initiate intracellular transport. The core component of the COPI complex is coatomer, which is a multimeric complex that needs to be recruited from the cytosol to membrane in order to function in membrane bending and cargo sorting. Previous structural studies on the clathrin adaptors have found that membrane recruitment induces a large conformational change in promoting their role in cargo sorting. Here, pursuing negative-stain electron microscopy coupled with single-particle analyses, and also performing CXMS (chemical cross-linking coupled with mass spectrometry) for validation, we have reconstructed the structure of coatomer in its soluble form. When compared to the previously elucidated structure of coatomer in its membrane-bound form we do not observe a large conformational change. Thus, the result uncovers a key difference between how COPI versus clathrin coats are regulated by membrane recruitment.

Details

Title
Structural characterization of coatomer in its cytosolic state
Author
Wang, Shengliu; Zhai, Yujia; Pang, Xiaoyun; Niu, Tongxin; Ding, Yue-he; Dong, Meng-qiu; Hsu, Victor W; Sun, Zhe; Sun, Fei
Pages
586-600
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Jul 2016
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
1674800X
e-ISSN
16748018
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1810916624
Copyright
HEP and Springer 2016