5M61
Clathrin heavy chain N-terminal domain bound to an extended amphiphysin clathrin-box motif
Summary for 5M61
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb5m61/pdb |
Descriptor | Clathrin heavy chain 1, Amphiphysin, GLYCEROL, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | endocytosis |
Biological source | Bos taurus (Bovine) More |
Cellular location | Cytoplasmic vesicle membrane; Peripheral membrane protein; Cytoplasmic side: P49951 Cytoplasmic vesicle, secretory vesicle, synaptic vesicle membrane; Peripheral membrane protein; Cytoplasmic side: P49418 |
Total number of polymer chains | 6 |
Total formula weight | 86987.49 |
Authors | Muenzner, J.,Graham, S.C. (deposition date: 2016-10-23, release date: 2016-11-23, Last modification date: 2024-01-17) |
Primary citation | Muenzner, J.,Traub, L.M.,Kelly, B.T.,Graham, S.C. Cellular and viral peptides bind multiple sites on the N-terminal domain of clathrin. Traffic, 18:44-57, 2017 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Short peptide motifs in unstructured regions of clathrin-adaptor proteins recruit clathrin to membranes to facilitate post-Golgi membrane transport. Three consensus clathrin-binding peptide sequences have been identified and structural studies show that each binds distinct sites on the clathrin heavy chain N-terminal domain (NTD). A fourth binding site for adaptors on NTD has been functionally identified but not structurally characterised. We have solved high resolution structures of NTD bound to peptide motifs from the cellular clathrin adaptors β2 adaptin and amphiphysin plus a putative viral clathrin adaptor, hepatitis D virus large antigen (HDAg-L). Surprisingly, with each peptide we observe simultaneous peptide binding at multiple sites on NTD and viral peptides binding to the same sites as cellular peptides. Peptides containing clathrin-box motifs (CBMs) with the consensus sequence LΦxΦ[DE] bind at the 'arrestin box' on NTD, between β-propeller blades 4 and 5, which had previously been thought to bind a distinct consensus sequence. Further, we structurally define the fourth peptide binding site on NTD, which we term the Royle box. In vitro binding assays show that clathrin is more readily captured by cellular CBMs than by HDAg-L, and site-directed mutagenesis confirms that multiple binding sites on NTD contribute to efficient capture by CBM peptides. PubMed: 27813245DOI: 10.1111/tra.12457 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.84 Å) |
Structure validation
Download full validation report