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PDBsum entry 3f7f
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Structural protein
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PDB id
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3f7f
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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PDB id:
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Structural protein
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Title:
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Structure of nup120
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Structure:
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Nucleoporin nup120. Chain: a, b, c, d. Fragment: unp residues 1-729. Synonym: nuclear pore protein nup120. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
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Source:
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Organism_taxid: 4932. Gene: nup120, rat2, ykl057c, ykl314, ykl313. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 562.
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Resolution:
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2.60Å
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R-factor:
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0.232
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R-free:
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0.254
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Authors:
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H.S.Seo,Y.Ma,E.W.Debler,G.Blobel,A.Hoelz
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Key ref:
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H.S.Seo
et al.
(2009).
Structural and functional analysis of Nup120 suggests ring formation of the Nup84 complex.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
106,
14281-14286.
PubMed id:
DOI:
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Date:
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08-Nov-08
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Release date:
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18-Aug-09
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PROCHECK
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Headers
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References
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P35729
(NU120_YEAST) -
Nucleoporin NUP120 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (strain ATCC 204508 / S288c)
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Seq: Struc:
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1037 a.a.
701 a.a.*
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Key: |
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PfamA domain |
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Secondary structure |
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*
PDB and UniProt seqs differ
at 1 residue position (black
cross)
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DOI no:
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
106:14281-14286
(2009)
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PubMed id:
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Structural and functional analysis of Nup120 suggests ring formation of the Nup84 complex.
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H.S.Seo,
Y.Ma,
E.W.Debler,
D.Wacker,
S.Kutik,
G.Blobel,
A.Hoelz.
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ABSTRACT
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The Nup84 complex constitutes a key building block in the nuclear pore complex
(NPC). Here we present the crystal structure of one of its 7 components, Nup120,
which reveals a beta propeller and an alpha-helical domain representing a novel
fold. We discovered a previously unidentified interaction of Nup120 with Nup133
and confirmed the physiological relevance in vivo. As mapping of the individual
components in the Nup84 complex places Nup120 and Nup133 at opposite ends of the
heptamer, our findings indicate a head-to-tail arrangement of elongated Nup84
complexes into a ring structure, consistent with a fence-like coat for the
nuclear pore membrane. The attachment site for Nup133 lies at the very end of an
extended unstructured region, which allows for flexibility in the diameter of
the Nup84 complex ring. These results illuminate important roles of terminal
unstructured segments in nucleoporins for the architecture, function, and
assembly of the NPC.
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Selected figure(s)
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Figure 2.
Structural analysis of the Nup120 NTD domains. (A) Ribbon
representation of the Nup120 β propeller domain. The 7 blades
of the β propeller core (yellow), the location of the
disordered 1E1A loop (orange), the 3D4A loop (red), the
α-helical insertion in the 6D7A loop (blue), and their
secondary structure elements are indicated. (B) Schematic
representation of the Nup120 β propeller domain and the
locations of its various insertions. (C) Ribbon representation
of the Nup120 α-helical domain. The leucine zipper–like core
(orange) and the 9 surrounding α-helices (green) are indicated.
A 180°-rotated view is shown on the right.
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Figure 5.
Model for the ring formation of the Nup84 complex. (A)
Schematic representation of the heptameric complex and the
approximate localization of its 7 nups (19). (B) The interaction
of Nup120 and Nup133 suggests the intermolecular interaction
between 2 heptamers in a head-to-tail fashion mediated by a
short stretch at the very N terminus of an extended unstructured
region of Nup133. (C) Eight heptamers are arranged in a closed
ring with a diameter of ≈1,000 Å in accordance with the
NPC dimensions determined by cryo-electron microscopy (8).
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Figures were
selected
by an automated process.
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Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference
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PubMed id
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Reference
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M.Raices,
and
M.A.D'Angelo
(2012).
Nuclear pore complex composition: a new regulator of tissue-specific and developmental functions.
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Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol,
13,
687-699.
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M.Kampmann,
C.E.Atkinson,
A.L.Mattheyses,
and
S.M.Simon
(2011).
Mapping the orientation of nuclear pore proteins in living cells with polarized fluorescence microscopy.
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Nat Struct Mol Biol,
18,
643-649.
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E.W.Debler,
K.C.Hsia,
V.Nagy,
H.S.Seo,
and
A.Hoelz
(2010).
Characterization of the membrane-coating Nup84 complex: Paradigm for the nuclear pore complex structure.
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Nucleus,
1,
150-157.
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H.N.Banerjee,
J.Gibbs,
T.Jordan,
and
M.Blackshear
(2010).
Depletion of a single nucleoporin, Nup107, induces apoptosis in eukaryotic cells.
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Mol Cell Biochem,
343,
21-25.
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J.J.Bergeron,
C.E.Au,
M.Desjardins,
P.S.McPherson,
and
T.Nilsson
(2010).
Cell biology through proteomics--ad astra per alia porci.
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Trends Cell Biol,
20,
337-345.
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J.M.Mitchell,
J.Mansfeld,
J.Capitanio,
U.Kutay,
and
R.W.Wozniak
(2010).
Pom121 links two essential subcomplexes of the nuclear pore complex core to the membrane.
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J Cell Biol,
191,
505-521.
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R.Santarella-Mellwig,
J.Franke,
A.Jaedicke,
M.Gorjanacz,
U.Bauer,
A.Budd,
I.W.Mattaj,
and
D.P.Devos
(2010).
The compartmentalized bacteria of the planctomycetes-verrucomicrobia-chlamydiae superphylum have membrane coat-like proteins.
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PLoS Biol,
8,
e1000281.
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V.Nagy,
K.C.Hsia,
E.W.Debler,
M.Kampmann,
A.M.Davenport,
G.Blobel,
and
A.Hoelz
(2009).
Structure of a trimeric nucleoporin complex reveals alternate oligomerization states.
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
106,
17693-17698.
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PDB code:
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The most recent references are shown first.
Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly
from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be
only a partial list as not all journals are covered by
either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data
so more and more references will be included with time.
Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB
code is
shown on the right.
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}
}
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