Biochemically validated structural model of the 15-subunit intraflagellar transport complex IFT-B

Narcis A. Petriman*, Marta Loureiro-López, Michael Taschner, Nevin K. Zacharia, Magdalena M. Georgieva, Niels Boegholm, Jiaolong Wang, André Mourão, Robert B. Russell, Jens S. Andersen, Esben Lorentzen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Cilia are ubiquitous eukaryotic organelles impotant for cellular motility, signaling, and sensory reception. Cilium formation requires intraflagellar transport of structural and signaling components and involves 22 different proteins organized into intraflagellar transport (IFT) complexes IFT-A and IFT-B that are transported by molecular motors. The IFT-B complex constitutes the backbone of polymeric IFT trains carrying cargo between the cilium and the cell body. Currently, high-resolution structures are only available for smaller IFT-B subcomplexes leaving > 50% structurally uncharacterized. Here, we used Alphafold to structurally model the 15-subunit IFT-B complex. The model was validated using cross-linking/mass-spectrometry data on reconstituted IFT-B complexes, X-ray scattering in solution, diffraction from crystals as well as site-directed mutagenesis and protein-binding assays. The IFT-B structure reveals an elongated and highly flexible complex consistent with cryo-electron tomographic reconstructions of IFT trains. The IFT-B complex organizes into IFT-B1 and IFT-B2 parts with binding sites for ciliary cargo and the inactive IFT dynein motor, respectively. Interestingly, our results are consistent with two different binding sites for IFT81/74 on IFT88/70/52/46 suggesting the possibility of different structural architectures for the IFT-B1 complex. Our data present a structural framework to understand IFT-B complex assembly, function, and ciliopathy variants.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere112440
JournalEMBO Journal
Volume41
Issue number24
ISSN0261-4189
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15. Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Binding Sites
  • Biological Transport
  • Cilia/metabolism
  • Dyneins/metabolism
  • Flagella/metabolism
  • Models, Structural

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