Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Structure of Coatomer Cage Proteins and the Relationship among COPI, COPII, and Clathrin Vesicle Coats

2010; Cell Press; Volume: 142; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.cell.2010.05.030

ISSN

1097-4172

Autores

Changwook Lee, Jonathan M. Goldberg,

Tópico(s)

Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease

Resumo

COPI-coated vesicles form at the Golgi apparatus from two cytosolic components, ARF G protein and coatomer, a heptameric complex that can polymerize into a cage to deform the membrane into a bud. Although coatomer shares a common evolutionary origin with COPII and clathrin vesicle coat proteins, the architectural relationship among the three cages is unclear. Strikingly, the αβ′-COP core of coatomer crystallizes as a triskelion in which three copies of a β′-COP β-propeller domain converge through their axial ends. We infer that the trimer constitutes the vertex of the COPI cage. Our model proposes that the COPI cage is intermediate in design between COPII and clathrin: COPI shares with clathrin an arrangement of three curved α-solenoid legs radiating from a common center, and COPI shares with COPII highly similar vertex interactions involving the axial ends of β-propeller domains.

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