4.8 Article

Structural basis of polyamine transport by human ATP13A2 (PARK9)

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 81, Issue 22, Pages 4635-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2021.08.017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Vallee Scholars Program
  2. Pew Biomedical Scholars Program
  3. NIH [5T32GM008295]
  4. NSF graduate research fellowship [DGE 1752814]
  5. Max Planck Society
  6. Michael J. Fox Foundation [ASAP-000350]

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Polyamines are small, organic polycations essential to all forms of life. Recent studies suggest that ATP13A2 and its close homologs are polyamine transporters at endo-/lysosomes. High-resolution cryoelectron microscopy structures of ATP13A2 revealed a near-complete transport cycle and the basis for polyamine specificity.
Polyamines are small, organic polycations that are ubiquitous and essential to all forms of life. Currently, how polyamines are transported across membranes is not understood. Recent studies have suggested that ATP13A2 and its close homologs, collectively known as P5B-ATPases, are polyamine transporters at endo-/lysosomes. Loss-of-function mutations of ATP13A2 in humans cause hereditary early-onset Parkinson's disease. To understand the polyamine transport mechanism of ATP13A2, we determined high-resolution cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of human ATP13A2 in five distinct conformational intermediates, which together, represent a near-complete transport cycle of ATP13A2. The structural basis of the polyamine specificity was revealed by an endogenous polyamine molecule bound to a narrow, elongated cavity within the transmembrane domain. The structures show an atypical transport path for a water-soluble substrate, in which polyamines may exit within the cytosolic leaflet of the membrane. Our study provides important mechanistic insights into polyamine transport and a framework to understand the functions and mechanisms of P5B-ATPases.

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