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Structure of the HOPS tethering complex, a lysosomal membrane fusion machinery.

Dmitry ShvarevJannis SchoppeCaroline KönigAngela PerzNadia FüllbrunnStephan KiontkeLars LangemeyerDovile JanulieneKilian SchnelleDaniel KümmelFlorian FröhlichArne MoellerChristian Ungermann
Published in: eLife (2022)
Lysosomes are essential for cellular recycling, nutrient signaling, autophagy, and pathogenic bacteria and viruses invasion. Lysosomal fusion is fundamental to cell survival and requires HOPS, a conserved heterohexameric tethering complex. On the membranes to be fused, HOPS binds small membrane-associated GTPases and assembles SNAREs for fusion, but how the complex fulfills its function remained speculative. Here, we used cryo-electron microscopy to reveal the structure of HOPS. Unlike previously reported, significant flexibility of HOPS is confined to its extremities, where GTPase binding occurs. The SNARE-binding module is firmly attached to the core, therefore, ideally positioned between the membranes to catalyze fusion. Our data suggest a model for how HOPS fulfills its dual functionality of tethering and fusion and indicate why it is an essential part of the membrane fusion machinery.
Keyphrases
  • electron microscopy
  • cell death
  • gene expression
  • high resolution
  • transcription factor
  • dna methylation
  • cell migration