Abstract

The nuclear pore complex gates nucleocytoplasmic transport through a massive, eight-fold symmetric channel capped by a nucleoplasmic basket and structurally unique, cytoplasmic fibrils whose tentacles bind and regulate asymmetric traffic. The conserved Nup82 complex, composed of Nsp1, Nup82, and Nup159, forms the unique cytoplasmic fibrils that regulate mRNA nuclear export. Although the nuclear pore complex plays a fundamental, conserved role in nuclear trafficking, structural information about the cytoplasmic fibrils is limited. Here, we investigate the structural and biochemical interactions between Saccharomyces cerevisiae Nup159 and the nucleoporin, Dyn2. We find that Dyn2 is predominantly a homodimer and binds arrayed sites on Nup159, promoting the Nup159 parallel homodimerization. We present the first structure of Dyn2, determined at 1.85 Å resolution, complexed with a Nup159 target peptide. Dyn2 resembles homologous metazoan dynein light chains, forming homodimeric composite substrate binding sites that engage two independent 10-residue target motifs, imparting a β-strand structure to each peptide via antiparallel extension of the Dyn2 core β-sandwich. Dyn2 recognizes a highly conserved QT motif while allowing sequence plasticity in the flanking residues of the peptide. Isothermal titration calorimetric analysis of the comparative binding of Dyn2 to two Nup159 target sites shows similar affinities (18 and 13 μM), but divergent thermal binding modes. Dyn2 homodimers are arrayed in the crystal lattice, likely mimicking the arrayed architecture of Dyn2 on the Nup159 multivalent binding sites. Crystallographic interdimer interactions potentially reflect a cooperative basis for Dyn2-Nup159 complex formation. Our data highlight the determinants that mediate oligomerization of the Nup82 complex and promote a directed, elongated cytoplasmic fibril architecture.

Highlights

  • Dyn2 and Nup159 interact to induce oligomerization of the Nup82 cytoplasmic fibril complex

  • S. cerevisiae Dyn2 Is a member of the Conserved Dynein Light Chain Family—The dynein light chain, a component of the cytoplasmic dynein motor complex, is highly conserved from yeast to human (Fig. 1A)

  • The dynein light chain is 90% identical across higher eukaryotes ranging from Caenorhabditis elegans to human, with significant identity extending to lower eukaryotes, as exemplified by the 50% identity between S. cerevisiae Dyn2 and Drosophila melanogaster light chain 8 (LC8)

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Summary

Background

Dyn and Nup159 interact to induce oligomerization of the Nup cytoplasmic fibril complex. C-terminal to the Phe-Gly-rich repeats is a 100-amino acid region termed the dynein light chain-interacting domain (DID) that uses a pentameric array of dynein light chain binding motifs to bind the yeast dynein light chain Dyn2 [11]. Given the diverse set of dynein light chain partners, it has been postulated that the dynein light chain functionally serves as a dimerization machine This role correlates with the structures of higher Dyn orthologs that show dynein light chains complexed 2:2 with a variety of target peptides [23, 25,26,27,28]. To further our molecular understanding of Dyn and its functional role in the NPC, we determined the x-ray crystal structure of Dyn in complex with a Nup159 target site. We couple structural data with gel filtration, multiangle light scattering, and isothermal titration calorimetry to derive a model for the Dyn2-Nup159 interaction and the role of Dyn as a dimerization machine

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