Combinatorial multivalent interactions drive cooperative assembly of the COPII coat
Author(s) -
Viktoriya G. Stancheva,
Xiaohan Li,
Joshua Hutchings,
Natalia GómezNavarro,
Balaji Santhanam,
M. Madan Babu,
Giulia Zanetti,
Elizabeth A. Miller
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of cell biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.414
H-Index - 380
eISSN - 1540-8140
pISSN - 0021-9525
DOI - 10.1083/jcb.202007135
Subject(s) - copii , endoplasmic reticulum , coat , vesicle , coat protein , membrane curvature , copi , bacterial outer membrane , biophysics , secretion , scaffold protein , microbiology and biotechnology , nanotechnology , chemistry , biology , membrane , golgi apparatus , materials science , secretory pathway , biochemistry , paleontology , rna , signal transduction , escherichia coli , gene
Protein secretion is initiated at the endoplasmic reticulum by the COPII coat, which self-assembles to form vesicles. Here, we examine the mechanisms by which a cargo-bound inner coat layer recruits and is organized by an outer scaffolding layer to drive local assembly of a stable structure rigid enough to enforce membrane curvature. An intrinsically disordered region in the outer coat protein, Sec31, drives binding with an inner coat layer via multiple distinct interfaces, including a newly defined charge-based interaction. These interfaces combinatorially reinforce each other, suggesting coat oligomerization is driven by the cumulative effects of multivalent interactions. The Sec31 disordered region could be replaced by evolutionarily distant sequences, suggesting plasticity in the binding interfaces. Such a multimodal assembly platform provides an explanation for how cells build a powerful yet transient scaffold to direct vesicle traffic.
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