4xmm

From Proteopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Structure of the yeast coat nucleoporin complex, space group C2

Structural highlights

4xmm is a 8 chain structure with sequence from Homo sapiens and Saccharomyces cerevisiae S288C. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Method:X-ray diffraction, Resolution 7.384Å
Resources:FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT

Publication Abstract from PubMed

The nuclear pore complex (NPC) constitutes the sole gateway for bidirectional nucleocytoplasmic transport. Despite half a century of structural characterization, the architecture of the NPC remains unknown. Here we present the crystal structure of a reconstituted ~400-kilodalton coat nucleoporin complex (CNC) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae at a 7.4 angstrom resolution. The crystal structure revealed a curved Y-shaped architecture and the molecular details of the coat nucleoporin interactions forming the central "triskelion" of the Y. A structural comparison of the yeast CNC with an electron microscopy reconstruction of its human counterpart suggested the evolutionary conservation of the elucidated architecture. Moreover, 32 copies of the CNC crystal structure docked readily into a cryoelectron tomographic reconstruction of the fully assembled human NPC, thereby accounting for ~16 megadalton of its mass.

Nuclear pores. Architecture of the nuclear pore complex coat.,Stuwe T, Correia AR, Lin DH, Paduch M, Lu VT, Kossiakoff AA, Hoelz A Science. 2015 Mar 6;347(6226):1148-52. doi: 10.1126/science.aaa4136. Epub 2015, Feb 12. PMID:25745173[1]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Loading citation details..
No citations found

See Also

References

  1. Stuwe T, Correia AR, Lin DH, Paduch M, Lu VT, Kossiakoff AA, Hoelz A. Nuclear pores. Architecture of the nuclear pore complex coat. Science. 2015 Mar 6;347(6226):1148-52. doi: 10.1126/science.aaa4136. Epub 2015, Feb 12. PMID:25745173 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aaa4136

Contents


PDB ID 4xmm

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools