Structure of the membrane-assembled retromer coat determined by cryo-electron tomography

被引:0
作者
Oleksiy Kovtun
Natalya Leneva
Yury S. Bykov
Nicholas Ariotti
Rohan D. Teasdale
Miroslava Schaffer
Benjamin D. Engel
David. J. Owen
John A. G. Briggs
Brett M. Collins
机构
[1] Cambridge Biomedical Campus,MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
[2] European Molecular Biology Laboratory,Structural and Computational Biology Unit
[3] The University of Queensland,Institute for Molecular Bioscience
[4] University of Cambridge,Cambridge Institute for Medical Research
[5] Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry,Department of Molecular Structural Biology
[6] Electron Microscope Unit,undefined
[7] The University of New South Wales,undefined
[8] School of Biomedical Sciences,undefined
[9] The University of Queensland,undefined
来源
Nature | 2018年 / 561卷
关键词
Cryo-electron Tomography; Subtomogram Averaging; Retromer Complex; Sorting Nexin (SNX); Coated Tubes;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Eukaryotic cells traffic proteins and lipids between different compartments using protein-coated vesicles and tubules. The retromer complex is required to generate cargo-selective tubulovesicular carriers from endosomal membranes1–3. Conserved in eukaryotes, retromer controls the cellular localization and homeostasis of hundreds of transmembrane proteins, and its disruption is associated with major neurodegenerative disorders4–7. How retromer is assembled and how it is recruited to form coated tubules is not known. Here we describe the structure of the retromer complex (Vps26–Vps29–Vps35) assembled on membrane tubules with the bin/amphiphysin/rvs-domain-containing sorting nexin protein Vps5, using cryo-electron tomography and subtomogram averaging. This reveals a membrane-associated Vps5 array, from which arches of retromer extend away from the membrane surface. Vps35 forms the ‘legs’ of these arches, and Vps29 resides at the apex where it is free to interact with regulatory factors. The bases of the arches connect to each other and to Vps5 through Vps26, and the presence of the same arches on coated tubules within cells confirms their functional importance. Vps5 binds to Vps26 at a position analogous to the previously described cargo- and Snx3-binding site, which suggests the existence of distinct retromer-sorting nexin assemblies. The structure provides insight into the architecture of the coat and its mechanism of assembly, and suggests that retromer promotes tubule formation by directing the distribution of sorting nexin proteins on the membrane surface while providing a scaffold for regulatory-protein interactions.
引用
收藏
页码:561 / 564
页数:3
相关论文
共 123 条
[1]  
Burd C(2014)Retromer: a master conductor of endosome sorting Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Biol. 6 a016774-4702
[2]  
Cullen PJ(2012)The retromer complex – endosomal protein recycling and beyond J. Cell Sci. 125 4693-521
[3]  
Seaman MN(2015)Retromer: Structure, function, and roles in mammalian disease Eur. J. Cell Biol. 94 513-82
[4]  
Trousdale C(2017)The emerging role of retromer in neuroprotection Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 47 72-132
[5]  
Kim K(2015)Retromer in Alzheimer disease, Parkinson disease and other neurological disorders Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 16 126-167
[6]  
McMillan KJ(2011) mutations in Parkinson disease Am. J. Hum. Genet. 89 162-175
[7]  
Korswagen HC(2011)A mutation in Am. J. Hum. Genet. 89 168-2984
[8]  
Cullen PJ(2017), encoding a subunit of the retromer complex, causes late-onset Parkinson disease J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 28 2973-122
[9]  
Small SA(2017)The sorting nexin 3 retromer pathway regulates the cell surface localization and activity of a Wnt-activated polycystin channel complex Traffic 18 110-E3613
[10]  
Petsko GA(2014)Cargo selectivity of yeast sorting nexins Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 111 E3604-1690