Laboratory of Mass Spectrometry and Gaseous Ion Chemistry
Brian T. Chait
Overview
Research
Lab Members
Publications
Tools
Protocols
Tutorials
Contact Us

The Rockefeller University
The Rockefeller University
1230 York Avenue,
New York, NY 10065
(212) 327-8000


National Center of Research Resources
National Resource
for the Mass Spectrometric
Analysis of Biological
Macromolecules

Research Projects

The molecular architecture of the nuclear pore complex

Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are proteinaceous assemblies of approximately 50 MDa that selectively transport cargoes across the nuclear envelope. To determine the molecular architecture of the yeast NPC, we collected a diverse set of biophysical and proteomic data, and developed a method for using these data to localize the NPC's 456 constituent proteins. Our structure reveals that half of the NPC is made up of a core scaffold, which is structurally analogous to vesicle-coating complexes. This scaffold forms an interlaced network that coats the entire curved surface of the nuclear envelope membrane within which the NPC is embedded. The selective barrier for transport is formed by large numbers of proteins with disordered regions that line the inner face of the scaffold. The NPC consists of only a few structural modules that resemble each other in terms of the configuration of their homologous constituents, the most striking of these being a 16-fold repetition of 'columns'. These findings provide clues to the evolutionary origins of the NPC.

See video of the structure of the nuclear pore complex

References:

F. Alber, S. Dokudovskaya, L.M. Veenhoff, W. Zhang, J. Kipper, D. Devos, A. Suprapto, O. Karni-Schmidt, R. Williams, B.T. Chait, A. Sali, M.P. Rout, "The molecular architecture of the nuclear pore complex" Nature 450 (2007) 695-701.

F. Alber, S. Dokudovskaya, L.M. Veenhoff, W. Zhang, J. Kipper, D. Devos, A. Suprapto, O. Karni-Schmidt, R. Williams, B.T. Chait, M.P. Rout, A. Sali, "Determining the architectures of macromolecular assemblies" Nature 450 (2007) 683-694.

Supplementary Data: http://www.salilab.org/npc/