Published in

Nature Research, Nature, 6734(399), p. 371-375, 1999

DOI: 10.1038/20708

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Clathrin self-assembly is mediated by a tandemly repeated superhelix.

Journal article published in 1999 by Ja Ybe, Fm Brodsky, Kay Hofmann, Kai Lin, Sh Liu, Lin Chen, Tn Earnest, Rj Fletterick, Pk Hwang
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Clathrin is a triskelion-shaped cytoplasmic protein that polymerizes into a polyhedral lattice on intracellular membranes to form protein-coated membrane vesicles. Lattice formation induces the sorting of membrane proteins during endocytosis and organelle biogenesis by interacting with membrane-associated adaptor molecules. The clathrin triskelion is a trimer of heavy-chain subunits (1,675 residues), each binding a single light-chain subunit, in the hub domain (residues 1,074-1,675). Light chains negatively modulate polymerization so that intracellular clathrin assembly is adaptor-dependent. Here we report the atomic structure, to 2.6 A resolution, of hub residues 1,210-1,516 involved in mediating spontaneous clathrin heavy-chain polymerization and light-chain association. The hub fragment folds into an elongated coil of alpha-helices, and alignment analyses reveal a 145-residue motif that is repeated seven times along the filamentous leg and appears in other proteins involved in vacuolar protein sorting. The resulting model provides a three-dimensional framework for understanding clathrin heavy-chain self-assembly, light-chain binding and trimerization.