IUCrJ (May 2019)

Cryo-EM reveals the asymmetric assembly of squid hemocyanin

  • Yoshikazu Tanaka,
  • Sanae Kato,
  • Markus Stabrin,
  • Stefan Raunser,
  • Takashi Matsui,
  • Christos Gatsogiannis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S205225251900321X
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
pp. 426 – 437

Abstract

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The oxygen transporter of molluscs, hemocyanin, consists of long pearl-necklace-like subunits of several globular domains. The subunits assemble in a complex manner to form cylindrical decamers. Typically, the first six domains of each subunit assemble together to form the cylinder wall, while the C-terminal domains form a collar that fills or caps the cylinder. During evolution, various molluscs have been able to fine-tune their oxygen binding by deleting or adding C-terminal domains and adjusting their inner-collar architecture. However, squids have duplicated one of the wall domains of their subunits instead. Here, using cryo-EM and an optimized refinement protocol implemented in SPHIRE, this work tackled the symmetry-mismatched structure of squid hemocyanin, revealing the precise effect of this duplication on its quaternary structure and providing a potential model for its structural evolution.

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