6UGD image
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
6UGD
EMDB ID:
Keywords:
Title:
Katanin hexamer in the spiral conformation in complex with substrate
Biological Source:
PDB Version:
Deposition Date:
2019-09-26
Release Date:
2019-10-09
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
3.50 Å
Aggregation State:
PARTICLE
Reconstruction Method:
SINGLE PARTICLE
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Description:Meiotic spindle formation protein mei-1
Mutations:E293Q
Chain IDs:A, B, C, D, E, F
Chain Length:490
Number of Molecules:6
Biological Source:Caenorhabditis elegans
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Description:Polyglutamate peptide
Chain IDs:G
Chain Length:14
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:synthetic construct
Primary Citation
Katanin Grips the beta-Tubulin Tail through an Electropositive Double Spiral to Sever Microtubules.
Dev.Cell 52 118 131.e6 (2020)
PMID: 31735665 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2019.10.010

Abstact

The AAA ATPase katanin severs microtubules. It is critical in cell division, centriole biogenesis, and neuronal morphogenesis. Its mutation causes microcephaly. The microtubule templates katanin hexamerization and activates its ATPase. The structural basis for these activities and how they lead to severing is unknown. Here, we show that β-tubulin tails are necessary and sufficient for severing. Cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures reveal the essential tubulin tail glutamates gripped by a double spiral of electropositive loops lining the katanin central pore. Each spiral couples allosterically to the ATPase and binds alternating, successive substrate residues, with consecutive residues coordinated by adjacent protomers. This tightly couples tail binding, hexamerization, and ATPase activation. Hexamer structures in different states suggest an ATPase-driven, ratchet-like translocation of the tubulin tail through the pore. A disordered region outside the AAA core anchors katanin to the microtubule while the AAA motor exerts the forces that extract tubulin dimers and sever the microtubule.

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Primary Citation of related structures