| Structural highlights
Function
[DYL1_YEAST] Acts as one of several non-catalytic accessory components of the cytoplasmic dynein complex that are thought to be involved in linking dynein to cargos and to adapter proteins that regulate dynein function. Cytoplasmic dynein 1 acts as a motor for the intracellular retrograde motility of vesicles and organelles along microtubules. May play a role in changing or maintaining the spatial distribution of cytoskeletal structures (By similarity). [NU159_YEAST] Functions as a component of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). NPC components, collectively referred to as nucleoporins (NUPs), can play the role of both NPC structural components and of docking or interaction partners for transiently associated nuclear transport factors. Active directional transport is assured by both, a Phe-Gly (FG) repeat affinity gradient for these transport factors across the NPC and a transport cofactor concentration gradient across the nuclear envelope (GSP1 and GSP2 GTPases associated predominantly with GTP in the nucleus, with GDP in the cytoplasm). NUP159 plays an important role in several nuclear export pathways including poly(A)+ RNA, pre-ribosome, and protein export.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]
Publication Abstract from PubMed
The Nuclear Pore Complex gates nucleocytoplasmic transport through a massive, eight-fold symmetric channel capped by a nucleoplasmic basket and structurally unique, cytoplasmic fibrils whose tentacles bind and regulate asymmetric traffic. The conserved Nup82 complex, composed of Nsp1, Nup82 and Nup159, forms the unique cytoplasmic fibrils that regulate mRNA nuclear export. While the nuclear pore complex plays a fundamental, conserved role in nuclear trafficking, structural information about the cytoplasmic fibrils is limited. Here, we investigate the structural and biochemical interactions between S. cerevisiae Nup159 and the nucleoporin: Dyn2. We find that Dyn2 is predominantly a homodimer and binds arrayed sites on Nup159, promoting Nup159's parallel homodimerization. We present the first structure of Dyn2, determined at 1.85 A resolution, complexed with a Nup159 target peptide. Dyn2 resembles homologous metazoan dynein light chains, forming homodimeric composite substrate binding sites that engage two independent 10 residue target motifs, imparting a beta-strand structure to each peptide via anti-parallel extension of Dyn2's core beta-sandwich. Dyn2 recognizes a highly conserved QT motif, while allowing sequence plasticity in the peptide's flanking residues. Isothermal titration calorimetric analysis of Dyn2's comparative binding to two Nup159 target sites shows similar affinities (18 and 13 muM), but divergent thermal binding modes. Dyn2 homodimers are arrayed in the crystal lattice, likely mimicking Dyn2's arrayed architecture on Nup159's multivalent binding sites. Crystallographic inter-dimer interactions potentially reflect a cooperative basis for Dyn2-Nup159 complex formation. Our data highlights the determinants that mediate oligomerization of the Nup82 complex and promote a directed, elongated cytoplasmic fibril architecture.
The Structure of a yeast Dyn2-Nup159 complex and the molecular basis for the dynein light chain - nuclear pore interaction.,Romes EM, Tripathy A, Slep KC J Biol Chem. 2012 Mar 12. PMID:22411995[14]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Hurwitz ME, Strambio-de-Castillia C, Blobel G. Two yeast nuclear pore complex proteins involved in mRNA export form a cytoplasmically oriented subcomplex. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Sep 15;95(19):11241-5. PMID:9736720
- ↑ Belgareh N, Snay-Hodge C, Pasteau F, Dagher S, Cole CN, Doye V. Functional characterization of a Nup159p-containing nuclear pore subcomplex. Mol Biol Cell. 1998 Dec;9(12):3475-92. PMID:9843582
- ↑ Seedorf M, Damelin M, Kahana J, Taura T, Silver PA. Interactions between a nuclear transporter and a subset of nuclear pore complex proteins depend on Ran GTPase. Mol Cell Biol. 1999 Feb;19(2):1547-57. PMID:9891088
- ↑ Hodge CA, Colot HV, Stafford P, Cole CN. Rat8p/Dbp5p is a shuttling transport factor that interacts with Rat7p/Nup159p and Gle1p and suppresses the mRNA export defect of xpo1-1 cells. EMBO J. 1999 Oct 15;18(20):5778-88. PMID:10523319 doi:10.1093/emboj/18.20.5778
- ↑ Bailer SM, Balduf C, Katahira J, Podtelejnikov A, Rollenhagen C, Mann M, Pante N, Hurt E. Nup116p associates with the Nup82p-Nsp1p-Nup159p nucleoporin complex. J Biol Chem. 2000 Aug 4;275(31):23540-8. PMID:10801828 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M001963200
- ↑ Strasser K, Bassler J, Hurt E. Binding of the Mex67p/Mtr2p heterodimer to FXFG, GLFG, and FG repeat nucleoporins is essential for nuclear mRNA export. J Cell Biol. 2000 Aug 21;150(4):695-706. PMID:10952996
- ↑ Allen NP, Huang L, Burlingame A, Rexach M. Proteomic analysis of nucleoporin interacting proteins. J Biol Chem. 2001 Aug 3;276(31):29268-74. Epub 2001 May 31. PMID:11387327 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M102629200
- ↑ Gleizes PE, Noaillac-Depeyre J, Leger-Silvestre I, Teulieres F, Dauxois JY, Pommet D, Azum-Gelade MC, Gas N. Ultrastructural localization of rRNA shows defective nuclear export of preribosomes in mutants of the Nup82p complex. J Cell Biol. 2001 Dec 10;155(6):923-36. Epub 2001 Dec 10. PMID:11739405 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200108142
- ↑ Bailer SM, Balduf C, Hurt E. The Nsp1p carboxy-terminal domain is organized into functionally distinct coiled-coil regions required for assembly of nucleoporin subcomplexes and nucleocytoplasmic transport. Mol Cell Biol. 2001 Dec;21(23):7944-55. PMID:11689687 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.21.23.7944-7955.2001
- ↑ Allen NP, Patel SS, Huang L, Chalkley RJ, Burlingame A, Lutzmann M, Hurt EC, Rexach M. Deciphering networks of protein interactions at the nuclear pore complex. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2002 Dec;1(12):930-46. PMID:12543930
- ↑ Denning DP, Patel SS, Uversky V, Fink AL, Rexach M. Disorder in the nuclear pore complex: the FG repeat regions of nucleoporins are natively unfolded. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Mar 4;100(5):2450-5. Epub 2003 Feb 25. PMID:12604785 doi:10.1073/pnas.0437902100
- ↑ Strawn LA, Shen T, Shulga N, Goldfarb DS, Wente SR. Minimal nuclear pore complexes define FG repeat domains essential for transport. Nat Cell Biol. 2004 Mar;6(3):197-206. Epub 2004 Feb 22. PMID:15039779 doi:10.1038/ncb1097
- ↑ Weirich CS, Erzberger JP, Berger JM, Weis K. The N-terminal domain of Nup159 forms a beta-propeller that functions in mRNA export by tethering the helicase Dbp5 to the nuclear pore. Mol Cell. 2004 Dec 3;16(5):749-60. PMID:15574330 doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2004.10.032
- ↑ Romes EM, Tripathy A, Slep KC. The Structure of a yeast Dyn2-Nup159 complex and the molecular basis for the dynein light chain - nuclear pore interaction. J Biol Chem. 2012 Mar 12. PMID:22411995 doi:10.1074/jbc.M111.336172
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