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Structures of the atlastin GTPase provide insight into homotypic fusion of endoplasmic reticulum membranes

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2011

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National Academy of Sciences
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Bian, X., R. W. Klemm, T. Y. Liu, M. Zhang, S. Sun, X. Sui, X. Liu, T. A. Rapoport, and J. Hu. 2011. “Structures of the Atlastin GTPase Provide Insight into Homotypic Fusion of Endoplasmic Reticulum Membranes.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 (10): 3976–81. doi:10.1073/pnas.1101643108.

Abstract

The generation of the tubular network of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) requires homotypic membrane fusion that is mediated by the dynamin- like, membrane-bound GTPase atlastin (ATL). Here, we have determined crystal structures of the cytosolic segment of human ATL1, which give insight into the mechanism of membrane fusion. The structures reveal a GTPase domain and athree-helix bundle, connected by a linker region. One structure corresponds to a prefusion state, in which ATL molecules in apposing membranes interact through their GTPase domains to form a dimer with the nucleotides bound at the interface. The other structure corresponds to a postfusion state generated after GTP hydrolysis and phosphate release. Compared with the prefusion structure, the three-helix bundles of the two ATL molecules undergo a major conformational change relative to the GTPase domains, which could pull the membranes together. The proposed fusion mechanism is supported by biochemical experiments and fusion assays with wild-type and mutant full-length Drosophila ATL. These experiments also show that membrane fusion is facilitated by the C-terminal cytosolic tails following the two transmembrane segments. Finally, our results show that mutations in ATL1 causing hereditary spastic paraplegia compromise homotypic ER fusion.

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