1. Academic Validation
  2. Structure of the human cohesin inhibitor Wapl

Structure of the human cohesin inhibitor Wapl

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Jul 9;110(28):11355-60. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1304594110.
Zhuqing Ouyang 1 Ge Zheng Jianhua Song Dominika M Borek Zbyszek Otwinowski Chad A Brautigam Diana R Tomchick Susannah Rankin Hongtao Yu
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Pharmacology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA.
Abstract

Cohesin, along with positive regulators, establishes sister-chromatid cohesion by forming a ring to circle chromatin. The wings apart-like protein (Wapl) is a key negative regulator of cohesin and forms a complex with precocious dissociation of sisters protein 5 (Pds5) to promote cohesin release from chromatin. Here we report the crystal structure and functional characterization of human Wapl. Wapl contains a flexible, variable N-terminal region (Wapl-N) and a conserved C-terminal domain (Wapl-C) consisting of eight HEAT (Huntingtin, Elongation factor 3, A subunit, and target of rapamycin) repeats. Wapl-C folds into an elongated structure with two lobes. Structure-based mutagenesis maps the functional surface of Wapl-C to two distinct patches (I and II) on the N lobe and a localized patch (III) on the C lobe. Mutating critical patch I residues weaken Wapl binding to cohesin and diminish sister-chromatid resolution and cohesin release from mitotic chromosomes in human cells and Xenopus egg extracts. Surprisingly, patch III on the C lobe does not contribute to Wapl binding to cohesin or its known regulators. Although patch I mutations reduce Wapl binding to intact cohesin, they do not affect Wapl-Pds5 binding to the cohesin subcomplex of sister chromatid cohesion protein 1 (Scc1) and stromal antigen 2 (SA2) in vitro, which is instead mediated by Wapl-N. Thus, Wapl-N forms extensive interactions with Pds5 and Scc1-SA2. Wapl-C interacts with Other cohesin subunits and possibly unknown effectors to trigger cohesin release from chromatin.

Keywords

chromosome segregation; crystallography; genomic stability; mitosis; protein–protein interaction.

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