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Clathrin light and heavy chain interface: α‐helix binding superhelix loops via critical tryptophans
Author(s) -
Chen ChihYing,
Reese Michael L.,
Hwang Peter K.,
Ota Nobuyuki,
Agard David,
Brodsky Frances M.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1093/emboj/cdf594
Subject(s) - biology , clathrin , mutagenesis , microbiology and biotechnology , superhelix , biogenesis , mutant , biophysics , biochemistry , endocytosis , receptor , gene , dna replication , dna supercoil
Clathrin light chain subunits (LCa and LCb) contribute to regulation of coated vesicle formation to sort proteins during receptor‐mediated endocytosis and organelle biogenesis. LC binding to clathrin heavy chain (HC) was characterized by genetic and structural approaches. The core interactions were mapped to HC residues 1267–1522 (out of 1675) and LCb residues 90–157 (out of 228), using yeast two‐hybrid assays. The C‐termini of both subunits also displayed interactions extending beyond the core domains. Mutations to helix breakers within the LCb core disrupted HC association. Further suppressor mutagenesis uncovered compensatory mutations in HC (K1415E or K1326E) capable of rescuing the binding defects of LCb mutations W127R or W105R plus W138R, thereby pinpointing contacts between HC and LCb. Mutant HC K1415E also rescued loss of binding by LCa W130R, indicating that both LCs interact similarly with HC. Based on circular dichroism data, mapping and mutagenesis, LCa and LCb were represented as α‐helices, aligned along the HC and, using molecular dynamics, a structural model of their interaction was generated with novel implications for LC control of clathrin assembly.