Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yoshiyuki Matsuura is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yoshiyuki Matsuura.


Nature | 2004

Structural basis for the assembly of a nuclear export complex

Yoshiyuki Matsuura; Murray Stewart

The nuclear import and export of macromolecular cargoes through nuclear pore complexes is mediated primarily by carriers such as importin-β. Importins carry cargoes into the nucleus, whereas exportins carry cargoes to the cytoplasm. Transport is orchestrated by nuclear RanGTP, which dissociates cargoes from importins, but conversely is required for cargo binding to exportins. Here we present the 2.0 Å crystal structure of the nuclear export complex formed by exportin Cse1p complexed with its cargo (Kap60p) and RanGTP, thereby providing a structural framework for understanding nuclear protein export and the different functions of RanGTP in export and import. In the complex, Cse1p coils around both RanGTP and Kap60p, stabilizing the RanGTP-state and clamping the Kap60p importin-β-binding domain, ensuring that only cargo-free Kap60p is exported. Mutagenesis indicated that conformational changes in exportins couple cargo binding to high affinity for RanGTP, generating a spring-loaded molecule to facilitate disassembly of the export complex following GTP hydrolysis in the cytoplasm.


Nature | 2005

Structural basis for nuclear import complex dissociation by RanGTP.

Soo Jae Lee; Yoshiyuki Matsuura; Sai Man Liu; Murray Stewart

Nuclear protein import is mediated mainly by the transport factor importin-β that binds cytoplasmic cargo, most often via the importin-α adaptor, and then transports it through nuclear pore complexes. This active transport is driven by disassembly of the import complex by nuclear RanGTP. The switch I and II loops of Ran change conformation with nucleotide state, and regulate its interactions with nuclear trafficking components. Importin-β consists of 19 HEAT repeats that are based on a pair of antiparallel α-helices (referred to as the A- and B-helices). The HEAT repeats stack to yield two C-shaped arches, linked together to form a helicoidal molecule that has considerable conformational flexibility. Here we present the structure of full-length yeast importin-β (Kap95p or karyopherin-β) complexed with RanGTP, which provides a basis for understanding the crucial cargo-release step of nuclear import. We identify a key interaction site where the RanGTP switch I loop binds to the carboxy-terminal arch of Kap95p. This interaction produces a change in helicoidal pitch that locks Kap95p in a conformation that cannot bind importin-α or cargo. We suggest an allosteric mechanism for nuclear import complex disassembly by RanGTP.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Nup50/Npap60 function in nuclear protein import complex disassembly and importin recycling

Yoshiyuki Matsuura; Murray Stewart

Nuclear import of proteins containing classical nuclear localization signals (NLS) is mediated by the importin‐α:β complex that binds cargo in the cytoplasm and facilitates its passage through nuclear pores, after which nuclear RanGTP dissociates the import complex and the importins are recycled. In vertebrates, import is stimulated by nucleoporin Nup50, which has been proposed to accompany the import complex through nuclear pores. However, we show here that the Nup50 N‐terminal domain actively displaces NLSs from importin‐α, which would be more consistent with Nup50 functioning to coordinate import complex disassembly and importin recycling. The crystal structure of the importin‐α:Nup50 complex shows that Nup50 binds at two sites on importin‐α. One site overlaps the secondary NLS‐binding site, whereas the second extends along the importin‐α C‐terminus. Mutagenesis indicates that interaction at both sites is required for Nup50 to displace NLSs. The Cse1p:Kap60p:RanGTP complex structure suggests how Nup50 is then displaced on formation of the importin‐α export complex. These results provide a rationale for understanding the series of interactions that orchestrate the terminal steps of nuclear protein import.


FEBS Letters | 2001

Molecular mechanism of translocation through nuclear pore complexes during nuclear protein import

Murray Stewart; Rosanna P. Baker; Richard Bayliss; Lesley Clayton; Richard P. Grant; Trevor Littlewood; Yoshiyuki Matsuura

The trafficking of macromolecules between cytoplasm and nucleus through nuclear pore complexes is mediated by specific carrier molecules such as members of the importin‐β family. Nuclear pore proteins (nucleoporins) frequently contain sequence repeats based on FG cores and carriers appear to move their cargo through the pores by hopping between successive FG cores. A major question is why some macromolecules are transported while others are not. This selectivity may be generated by the ability to bind FG repeats, a local concentration of carrier–cargo complexes near the entrance to the pore channel, and steric hindrance produced by high concentrations of nucleoporins in the channel.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Structural basis for Nup2p function in cargo release and karyopherin recycling in nuclear import

Yoshiyuki Matsuura; Allison Lange; Michelle T. Harreman; Anita H. Corbett; Murray Stewart

The yeast nucleoporin Nup2p is associated primarily with the nuclear basket of nuclear pore complexes and is required for efficient importin‐α:β‐mediated nuclear protein import as well as efficient nuclear export of Kap60p/importin‐α. Residues 1–51 of Nup2p bind tightly to Kap60p and are required for Nup2p function in vivo. We have determined the 2.6 Å resolution crystal structure of a complex between this region of Nup2p and the armadillo repeat domain of Kap60p. Nup2p binds along the inner concave groove of Kap60p, but its interaction interface is different from that employed for nuclear localization signal (NLS) recognition although there is some overlap between them. Nup2p binds Kap60p more strongly than NLSs and accelerates release of NLSs from Kap60p. Nup2p itself is released from Kap60p by Cse1p:RanGTP only in the presence of the importin‐β binding (IBB) domain of Kap60p. These data indicate that Nup2p increases the overall rate of nuclear trafficking by coordinating nuclear import termination and importin recycling as a concerted process.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

An allosteric mechanism to displace nuclear export cargo from CRM1 and RanGTP by RanBP1

Masako Koyama; Yoshiyuki Matsuura

The karyopherin CRM1 mediates nuclear export of proteins and ribonucleoproteins bearing a leucine‐rich nuclear export signal (NES). To elucidate the precise mechanism by which NES‐cargos are dissociated from CRM1 in the cytoplasm, which is important for transport directionality, we determined a 2.0‐Å resolution crystal structure of yeast CRM1:RanBP1:RanGTP complex, an intermediate in the disassembly of the CRM1 nuclear export complex. The structure shows that on association of Ran‐binding domain (RanBD) of RanBP1 with CRM1:NES‐cargo:RanGTP complex, RanBD and the C‐terminal acidic tail of Ran induce a large movement of the intra‐HEAT9 loop of CRM1. The loop moves to the CRM1 inner surface immediately behind the NES‐binding site and causes conformational rearrangements in HEAT repeats 11 and 12 so that the hydrophobic NES‐binding cleft on the CRM1 outer surface closes, squeezing out the NES‐cargo. This allosteric mechanism accelerates dissociation of NES by over two orders of magnitude. Structure‐based mutagenesis indicated that the HEAT9 loop also functions as an allosteric autoinhibitor to stabilize CRM1 in a conformation that is unable to bind NES‐cargo in the absence of RanGTP.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

Structural basis for cell-cycle-dependent nuclear import mediated by the karyopherin Kap121p.

Junya Kobayashi; Yoshiyuki Matsuura

Kap121p (also known as Pse1p) is an essential karyopherin that mediates nuclear import of a plethora of cargoes including cell cycle regulators, transcription factors, and ribosomal proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It has been proposed that the spindle assembly checkpoint signaling triggers molecular rearrangements of nuclear pore complexes and thereby arrests Kap121p-mediated nuclear import at metaphase, while leaving import mediated by other karyopherins unaffected. The Kap121p-specific import inhibition is required for normal progression through mitosis. To understand the structural basis for Kap121p-mediated nuclear import and its unique regulatory mechanism during mitosis, we determined crystal structures of Kap121p in isolation and also in complex with either its import cargoes or nucleoporin Nup53p or RanGTP. Kap121p has a superhelical structure composed of 24 HEAT repeats. The structures of Kap121p-cargo complexes define a non-conventional nuclear localization signal (NLS) that has a consensus sequence of KV/IxKx1-2K/H/R. The structure of Kap121p-Nup53p complex shows that cargo and Nup53p compete for the same high-affinity binding site, explaining how Nup53p binding forces cargo release when the Kap121p-binding site of Nup53p is exposed during mitosis. Comparison of the NLS and RanGTP complexes reveals that RanGTP binding not only occludes the cargo-binding site but also forces Kap121p into a conformation that is incompatible with NLS recognition.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

A 2.1-Å-resolution crystal structure of unliganded CRM1 reveals the mechanism of autoinhibition.

Natsumi Saito; Yoshiyuki Matsuura

CRM1 mediates nuclear export of numerous proteins and ribonucleoproteins containing a leucine-rich nuclear export signal (NES). Binding of RanGTP to CRM1 in the nucleus stabilizes cargo association with CRM1, and vice versa, but the mechanism underlying the positive cooperativity in RanGTP and NES binding to CRM1 remains incompletely understood. Herein we report a 2.1-Å-resolution crystal structure of unliganded Saccharomyces cerevisiae CRM1 (Xpo1p) that demonstrates that an internal loop of CRM1 (referred to as HEAT9 loop) is primarily responsible for maintaining the NES-binding cleft in a closed conformation, rendering CRM1 incapable of NES binding in the absence of RanGTP. The structure also shows that the C-terminal tail of CRM1 stabilizes the autoinhibitory conformation of the HEAT9 loop and thereby reinforces autoinhibition. Comparison with the structures of CRM1-NES-RanGTP complexes reveals how binding of RanGTP is associated with a series of allosteric conformational changes in CRM1 that lead to opening of the NES-binding cleft, allowing for stable binding of NES cargoes.


Cell Reports | 2014

Structural Insights into How Yrb2p Accelerates the Assembly of the Xpo1p Nuclear Export Complex

Masako Koyama; Natsuki Shirai; Yoshiyuki Matsuura

Proteins and ribonucleoproteins containing a nuclear export signal (NES) assemble with the exportin Xpo1p (yeast CRM1) and Gsp1p-GTP (yeast Ran-GTP) in the nucleus and exit through the nuclear pore complex. In the cytoplasm, Yrb1p (yeast RanBP1) displaces NES from Xpo1p. Efficient export of NES-cargoes requires Yrb2p (yeast RanBP3), a primarily nuclear protein containing nucleoporin-like phenylalanine-glycine (FG) repeats and a low-affinity Gsp1p-binding domain (RanBD). Here, we show that Yrb2p strikingly accelerates the association of Gsp1p-GTP and NES to Xpo1p. We have solved the crystal structure of the Xpo1p-Yrb2p-Gsp1p-GTP complex, a key assembly intermediate that can bind cargo rapidly. Although the NES-binding cleft of Xpo1p is closed in this intermediate, our data suggest that preloading of Gsp1p-GTP onto Xpo1p by Yrb2p, conformational flexibility of Xpo1p, and the low affinity of RanBD enable active displacement of Yrb2p RanBD by NES to occur effectively. The structure also reveals the major binding sites for FG repeats on Xpo1p.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2012

Structures of the pleckstrin homology domain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Avo1 and its human orthologue Sin1, an essential subunit of TOR complex 2

Dongqing Pan; Yoshiyuki Matsuura

In eukaryotes, multiprotein complexes termed TOR complex 1 (TORC1) and TOR complex 2 (TORC2) function as major regulators of cell growth, metabolism and ageing. The C-terminal domain of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae TORC2 component Avo1 is required for plasma-membrane localization of TORC2 and is essential for yeast viability. X-ray crystal structures of the C-terminal domain of Avo1 and of its human orthologue Sin1 have been determined. The structures show that the C-termini of Avo1 and Sin1 both have the pleckstrin homology (PH) domain fold. Comparison with known PH-domain structures suggests a putative binding site for phosphoinositides.

Collaboration


Dive into the Yoshiyuki Matsuura's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Murray Stewart

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lesley Clayton

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge