Structural studies of large nucleoprotein particles, vaults

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Abstract

Vault is the largest nonicosahedral cytosolic nucleoprotein particle ever described. The widespread presence and evolutionary conservation of vaults suggest important biologic roles, although their functions have not been fully elucidated. X-ray structure of vault from rat liver was determined at 3.5Å resolution. It exhibits an ovoid shape with a size of 40 × 40 × 67nm3. The cage structure of vault consists of a dimer of half-vaults, with each half-vault comprising 39 identical major vault protein (MVP) chains. Each MVP monomer folds into 12 domains: nine structural repeat domains, a shoulder domain, a cap-helix domain and a cap-ring domain. Interactions between the 42-turn-long cap-helix domains are key to stabilizing the particle. The other components of vaults, telomerase-associated proteins, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases and small RNAs, are in location in the vault particle by electron microscopy. © 2012 The Japan Academy.

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APA

Tanaka, H., & Tsukihara, T. (2012). Structural studies of large nucleoprotein particles, vaults. Proceedings of the Japan Academy Series B: Physical and Biological Sciences. https://doi.org/10.2183/pjab.88.416

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