4.5 Article

Physical modeling of multivalent interactions in the nuclear pore complex

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 120, Issue 9, Pages 1565-1577

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2021.01.039

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Funding

  1. Royal Society [UF160266]
  2. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/L504889/1]
  3. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN 402591]

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Interactions between FG Nups and NTRs are crucial for cellular transport, with heterogeneity playing a significant role in binding and unbinding kinetics. Multivalency is a key factor influencing binding equilibria and kinetics. Single-molecule binding kinetics have little impact on NTR diffusion in polymer melts consisting of FG-Nup-like sequences.
In the nuclear pore complex, intrinsically disordered proteins (FG Nups), along with their interactions with more globular proteins called nuclear transport receptors (NTRs), are vital to the selectivity of transport into and out of the cell nucleus. Although such interactions can be modeled at different levels of coarse graining, in vitro experimental data have been quantitatively described by minimal models that describe FG Nups as cohesive homogeneous polymers and NTRs as uniformly cohesive spheres, in which the heterogeneous effects have been smeared out. By definition, these minimal models do not account for the explicit heterogeneities in FG Nup sequences, essentially a string of cohesive and noncohesive polymer units, and at the NTR surface. Here, we develop computational and analytical models that do take into account such heterogeneity in a minimal fashion and compare them with experimental data on single-molecule interactions between FG Nups and NTRs. Overall, we find that the heterogeneous nature of FG Nups and NTRs does play a role in determining equilibrium binding properties but is of much greater significance when it comes to unbinding and binding kinetics. Using our models, we predict how binding equilibria and kinetics depend on the distribution of cohesive blocks in the FG Nup sequences and of the binding pockets at the NTR surface, with multivalency playing a key role. Finally, we observe that single-molecule binding kinetics has a rather minor influence on the diffusion of NTRs in polymer melts consisting of FG-Nup-like sequences.

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