4.8 Article

Nuclear Pore Scaffold Structure Analyzed by Super-Resolution Microscopy and Particle Averaging

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 341, Issue 6146, Pages 655-658

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1240672

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Funding

  1. GSD development team of Leica Microsystems
  2. European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) Advanced Light Microscopy Facility
  3. EMBL Protein Expression and Purification Core
  4. German Research Council [DFG EL 246/3-2, SPP1175]

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Much of life's essential molecular machinery consists of large protein assemblies that currently pose challenges for structure determination. A prominent example is the nuclear pore complex (NPC), for which the organization of its individual components remains unknown. By combining stochastic super-resolution microscopy, to directly resolve the ringlike structure of the NPC, with single particle averaging, to use information from thousands of pores, we determined the average positions of fluorescent molecular labels in the NPC with a precision well below 1 nanometer. Applying this approach systematically to the largest building block of the NPC, the Nup107-160 subcomplex, we assessed the structure of the NPC scaffold. Thus, light microscopy can be used to study the molecular organization of large protein complexes in situ in whole cells.

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