Cryo–electron microscopy structure of the lipid droplet–formation protein seipin
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2018 papers
Abstract
Metabolic energy is stored in cells primarily as triacylglycerols in lipid droplets (LDs), and LD dysregulation leads to metabolic diseases. The formation of monolayer-bound LDs from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) bilayer is poorly understood, but the ER protein seipin is essential to this process. In this study, we report a cryo-electron microscopy structure and functional characterization of Drosophila melanogaster seipin. The structure reveals a ring-shaped dodecamer with the luminal domain of each monomer resolved at ∼4.0 Å. Each luminal domain monomer exhibits two distinctive features: a hydrophobic helix (HH) positioned toward the ER bilayer and a β-sandwich domain with structural similarity to lipid-binding proteins. This structure and our functional testing in cells suggest a model in which seipin oligomers initially detect forming LDs in the ER via HHs and subsequently act as membrane anchors to enable lipid transfer and LD growth.
Related Papers
- → Cryo-electron microscopy of viruses(1984)1,317 cited
- → Cryo-electron microscopy of vitreous sections of native biological cells and tissues(2004)267 cited
- → Morphological evidence for an endoplasmic reticulum origin of milk lipid globules obtained using lipid-selective staining procedures(1990)37 cited
- → Fine structure of the Leydig cell during postnatal differentiation of the mouse testis(1971)14 cited
- → Let's Start Structural Analysis of Biomolecules with Cryo-Electron Microscopy(2021)