TY - JOUR
T1 - Clathrin triskelia show evidence of molecular flexibility
AU - Ferguson, Matthew L.
AU - Prasad, Kondury
AU - Boukari, Hacene
AU - Sackett, Dan L.
AU - Krueger, Susan
AU - Lafer, Eileen M.
AU - Nossal, Ralph
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported in part by extramural National Institutes of Health grant No. NS29051 (to E.M.L.) and by intramural funds from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. We utilized facilities at the NIST Center for Neutron Research that are supported in part by the National Science Foundation under agreement No. DMR-0454672.
PY - 2008/8/15
Y1 - 2008/8/15
N2 - The clathrin triskelion, which is a three-legged pinwheel-shaped heteropolymer, is a major component in the protein coats of certain post-Golgi and endocytic vesicles. At low pH, or at physiological pH in the presence of assembly proteins, triskelia will self-assemble to form a closed clathrin cage, or "basket". Recent static light scattering and dynamic light scattering studies of triskelia in solution showed that an individual triskelion has an intrinsic pucker similar to, but differing from, that inferred from a high resolution cryoEM structure of a triskelion in a clathrin basket. We extend the earlier solution studies by performing small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) experiments on isolated triskelia, allowing us to examine a higher q range than that probed by static light scattering. Results of the SANS measurements are consistent with the light scattering measurements, but show a shoulder in the scattering function at intermediate q values (0.016 Å-1), just beyond the Guinier regime. This feature can be accounted for by Brownian dynamics simulations based on flexible bead-spring models of a triskelion, which generate time-averaged scattering functions. Calculated scattering profiles are in good agreement with the experimental SANS profiles when the persistence length of the assumed semiflexible triskelion is close to that previously estimated from the analysis of electron micrographs.
AB - The clathrin triskelion, which is a three-legged pinwheel-shaped heteropolymer, is a major component in the protein coats of certain post-Golgi and endocytic vesicles. At low pH, or at physiological pH in the presence of assembly proteins, triskelia will self-assemble to form a closed clathrin cage, or "basket". Recent static light scattering and dynamic light scattering studies of triskelia in solution showed that an individual triskelion has an intrinsic pucker similar to, but differing from, that inferred from a high resolution cryoEM structure of a triskelion in a clathrin basket. We extend the earlier solution studies by performing small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) experiments on isolated triskelia, allowing us to examine a higher q range than that probed by static light scattering. Results of the SANS measurements are consistent with the light scattering measurements, but show a shoulder in the scattering function at intermediate q values (0.016 Å-1), just beyond the Guinier regime. This feature can be accounted for by Brownian dynamics simulations based on flexible bead-spring models of a triskelion, which generate time-averaged scattering functions. Calculated scattering profiles are in good agreement with the experimental SANS profiles when the persistence length of the assumed semiflexible triskelion is close to that previously estimated from the analysis of electron micrographs.
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U2 - 10.1529/biophysj.107.126342
DO - 10.1529/biophysj.107.126342
M3 - Article
C2 - 18502808
AN - SCOPUS:50349091067
SN - 0006-3495
VL - 95
SP - 1945
EP - 1955
JO - Biophysical Journal
JF - Biophysical Journal
IS - 4
ER -