4.5 Article

Clathrin senses membrane curvature

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 120, Issue 5, Pages 818-828

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2020.12.035

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM112065, R35GM139531, R01GM118933, F32GM128316]
  2. Mays Center through the National Cancer Institute P30 Grant [CA054174]
  3. Texas State funds through the UTHSCSA Office of the Vice President for Research

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The ability of proteins to assemble at sites of high membrane curvature is important for diverse membrane remodeling processes, with clathrin being a strong sensor of membrane curvature. When recruited by adaptor proteins, clathrin's sensitivity to curvature is amplified, highlighting a synergistic relationship between the coat and adaptors in pinpointing sites of high membrane curvature. This suggests that protein networks, rather than individual protein domains, are likely the most potent drivers of membrane curvature sensing.
The ability of proteins to assemble at sites of high membrane curvature is essential to diverse membrane remodeling processes, including clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Multiple adaptor proteins within the clathrin pathway have been shown to sense regions of high membrane curvature, leading to local recruitment of the clathrin coat. Because clathrin triskelia do not bind to the membrane directly, it has remained unclear whether the clathrin coat plays an active role in sensing membrane curvature or is passively recruited by adaptor proteins. Using a synthetic tag to assemble clathrin directly on membrane surfaces, here we show that clathrin is a strong sensor of membrane curvature, comparable with previously studied adaptor proteins. Interestingly, this sensitivity arises from clathrin assembly rather than from the properties of unassembled triskelia, suggesting that triskelia have preferred angles of interaction, as predicted by earlier structural data. Furthermore, when clathrin is recruited by adaptors, its curvature sensitivity is amplified by 2- to 10-fold, such that the resulting protein complex is up to 100 times more likely to assemble on a highly curved surface compared with a flatter one. This exquisite sensitivity points to a synergistic relationship between the coat and its adaptor proteins, which enables clathrin to pinpoint sites of high membrane curvature, an essential step in ensuring robust membrane traffic. More broadly, these findings suggest that protein networks, rather than individual protein domains, are likely the most potent drivers of membrane curvature sensing.

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