Coronavirus genome replication is associated with virus-induced cytosolic double-membrane vesicles, which may provide a tailored micro-environment for viral RNA synthesis in the infected cell. However, it is unclear how newly synthesized genomes and mRNAs can travel from these sealed replication compartments to the cytosol to ensure their translation and the assembly of progeny virions. Here, we used cellular electron cryo-microscopy to visualize a molecular pore complex that spans both membranes of the double-membrane vesicle and would allow export of RNA to the cytosol. A hexameric assembly of a large viral transmembrane protein was found to form the core of the crown-shaped complex. This coronavirus-specific structure likely plays a critical role in coronavirus replication and thus constitutes a potential drug target.
Synucleins (α, β, γ-synuclein) are a family of abundant presynaptic proteins. α-Synuclein is causally linked to the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease (PD). In an effort to define their physiological and pathological function(s), we investigated the effects of deleting synucleins and overexpressing α-synuclein PD mutations, in mice, on synapse architecture using electron microscopy (EM) and Cryo-Electron Tomography (Cryo-ET). We show that synucleins are regulators of presynapse size and synaptic vesicle (SV) pool organization. Using Cryo-ET, we observed that deletion of synucleins increases SV tethering to the active zone but decreases the inter-linking of SVs by short connectors. These ultrastructural changes were correlated with discrete protein phosphorylation changes in αβγ-synuclein−/− neurons. We also determined that α-synuclein PD mutants (PARK1/hA30P, PARK4/hα-syn) primarily affected presynaptic cytomatrix proximal to the active zone, congruent with previous findings that these PD mutations decrease neurotransmission. Collectively, our results suggest that synucleins are important orchestrators of presynaptic terminal topography.
With faithful sample preservation and direct imaging of fully hydrated biological material, cryoelectron tomography (cryo-ET) provides an accurate representation of molecular architecture of cells. However, detection and precise localization of macromolecular complexes within cellular environments is aggravated by the presence of many molecular species and molecular crowding. We developed a template-free image processing procedure for accurate tracing of complex networks of densities in cryo-electron tomograms, a comprehensive and automated detection of heterogeneous membranebound complexes and an unsupervised classification. Applying this procedure to tomograms of intact cells and isolated endoplasmic reticulum (ER), we detected and classified small protein complexes like the ER protein translocons, which were not detected by other methods before. This classification provided sufficiently homogeneous particle sets and initial references to allow subsequent de novo subtomogram averaging. Therefore the procedure presented allows a comprehensive detection and a structural analysis of complexes in their native state. In addition, we present structural evidence that different ribosome-free translocon species are present at the ER membrane, determine their 3D structure, and show that they have different localization patterns forming nanodomains.
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